Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark
Icing on the Cake By Moira McTark
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Icing on the...
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark
Icing on the Cake By Moira McTark
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. Icing on the Cake Copyright© 2008 Moira McTark ISBN: 978‐1‐60088‐254‐8 Cover Artist: Sable Grey Editor: Tracy Seybold All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced electronically or in print without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in reviews. Cobblestone Press, LLC www.cobblestone‐press.com
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark
Dedication To my husband, Chris, and all the McTarks.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark
Chapter One Saturday, the fifth of June Sunshine glittered through the windows, reflecting the high polish of rich mahogany paneled walls and throwing a gilded cast across the room. A hush, broken only by birdsong from beyond the glass, surrounded them. They stood facing one another, he in his dark suit, she in her gown. A small, silk‐bundled bouquet rested against her chest. Laine Malone was overwhelmed by emotion. “You’re an asshole,” she snarled, narrowing her eyes to flash like daggers. If only looks could kill. Jason Henley, owner of the Henley Hotel, arched his brow and, clearly amused, let his attention fall to her lips. “Such pretty talk. You kiss your mother with that mouth?” His mocking tone chased away the shudder spurred by what was invariably a meaningless glance. She clenched her fist around the wilting bouquet. A stray thorn beneath the ribbon jabbed into the flesh of her palm, the shock of pain fueling her aggravation. An expert in four inch‐ heels, she yanked a fistful of her sapphire dress to the side and took a threatening stride forward to glare up at him. “You fix this or I’m going to shove this thorny, reject bouquet up your ass.” Unfazed, Jason smoothed the lapel of his perfectly tailored suit.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark “Sorry, princess, you’re barking up the wrong tree. I’m not into that kind of kink. But how about this? Take your pretty, plunging neckline and your sad little bouquet, and back off—clear out of my office so I can make some calls. Though I think we both know whose fault this was, I’ll make a concession and get a cake in here for your bride before the entrées are served.” Judging from the glint in his eyes, if she agreed to that she’d be looking at a two‐week‐old Spiderman birthday cake from the grocery store wheeled out during the choice of salmon or steak. “Get me a four‐ tiered cake in the next hour or you’ll hear from the Blissful Brides lawyer, and the Henley Hotel name is going to be smeared so bad you’ll never see another wedding in your rooftop rose garden.” “Save your threats, Laine.” Jason waved his hand in weary resignation as he rounded his desk to flip through a stack of papers. “You’ve got a wedding booked here every weekend for the next six months. You’re not calling a lawyer, and we both know it. Go tell that bride of yours, Melinda, her special day will be fine, regardless of the fact that her shit‐faced groom tripped my bellboy into her hideous cake.” He straightened his cornflower tie, the one that matched his eyes, perfecting the always immaculate appearance, and looked over at her. “And skip the salmon tonight; have dinner with me instead.” “Like hell I will,” she snuffed, not missing a beat over the last line that slipped under her skin and set her heart racing. What was he trying to pull? “And you know as well as I do your bellboy was high as a kite and tripped over his own damn shoes. The glowing red eyes and repeated pleas for Taco Bell were the only way we found him under the canopy of fondant.” “Fine, we’ll work it out this week. Let me get your new cake, so Connie Bliss doesn’t fire your gorgeous ass and the Henley Hotel keeps booking weddings fifteen months in advance.” Finding whatever paperwork he’d been looking for, he walked back around the desk. “Give me twenty minutes to take care of some business, and we’ll check back in.” “Fine,” she snapped.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Jason brushed past her with a dismissive wave. “Fine.” “Fine.” He infuriated her. The office door swung shut behind him and with it came his last hushed word. “Fine.” Alone in his office, she stomped her stiletto heel on the cut‐pile carpet, balled her fists at her sides and screamed through the closed door. “Fine!” Ha, like she’d let that arrogant bastard have the last word. He liked to fight, always giving her a hard time—well, he’d have to work harder than that. Darting a quick glance back at the mirrored wall behind her, she checked to see how obvious her fluster was. Not terrible, but more than she wanted him to see. Damn. Wedding planners weren’t supposed to ruffle. They should be unflappable, able to handle anything, even the feigned advances of chiseled‐cheeked, tall and sexy hotel managers built for wet dreams. He was so cocky, so smug, so infuriatingly attractive; it made her want to scream. Double damn, this wasn’t where her head should be. After what happened in May, she couldn’t afford another screw‐up. Not if she wanted to keep her job and reputation intact. Time to focus. Wedding. Bride. Special day. Damage control. Checking her reflection, she smoothed a stray hair, slicked on a smile, and cocked her head to the side. Instant transformation. The effect was warm and confident. Someone to trust to get it done, whatever it was. Cranking the smile, she looked like she was just bursting to make this day perfect. And, regardless of the “bridezilla” waiting on her upstairs, she honestly was. Laine adored her job and being a part of such a precious moment in the lives of two people who loved each other. With her help, they could concentrate fully on the meaning of the day, instead of the details that occasionally went awry. Details like cakes being demolished, bands failing to show, hotel owners getting sidetracked when they promised to deliver. What was Jason doing asking her to dinner, anyway? Was it some
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark kind of tactic to keep her off his case? Maybe he was serious, and she’d just blown him off without even pausing to consider. Not likely, she thought, trying to shake the feeling she’d just thrown away an opportunity she would have relished considering. That was ridiculous. She had eyes and ears, and the hospitality industry tended to be rather chatty. Everyone knew what a playboy Jason Henley was. A date with him all but ensured a satisfying night in one of the hotel’s luxurious suites—but then you’d never see him again. Rumor had it he’d been burned by some girl ten years ago, and now he kept women—a continuous string of them—at a safe distance from anything important to him. Heck, Laine had witnessed firsthand the parade of dates he’d escorted through the hotel. The first year she’d worked the Henley weddings, she’d seen him all but flaunting a different bombshell every Saturday. And with some degree of certainty, she could say she’d never seen the same face twice—or at the very least, twice in a row. It hadn’t been any of her business what the handsome hotel owner did in his personal life, and, though Laine had indulged in thoughts about finding out on more occasion than one, she never batted an eye at his casual approach to the ladies. But Jason was too committed to his hotel to chance a business relationship, albeit one as sporting as theirs, on a simple conquest. Besides, this past year, the playboy seemed to have dropped the one‐ nighters completely. He’d been too wrapped up in building the nuptial business to have many Saturday night dates. In fact she couldn’t remember the last time she’d seen a woman on his arm. But then, maybe he’d just developed a degree of discretion. Still, she couldn’t help but fantasize about a bit of relief for the many sleepless nights spent with the image of Jason’s well‐formed body— broad shoulders, trim hips, strong legs and arms—occupying her mind, teasing her body into a frustrated state of arousal. He was confident, intense, driven. And sexy. He was a man comfortable in his own skin, confident in the space he occupied. When he put his hand on her—for nothing more than pulling her out of the way of a falling cake, or to pick a
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark bit of birdseed from her hair—every nerve in her body seemed to sensitize, polarize, and pull toward the point of his touch. Closing her eyes, she willed the images of Jason from her mind. With a deep breath she walked out of his office. There was a bride to contend with. Jason was leaning against the front desk with his favorite “go‐to” bell boy, no doubt trying to score a cake through Dil’s connections. He might have been talking to Dil, but when his gaze caught her, it fixed, hardening into a steady stare that followed her as she crossed the marble lobby floor and had her skin flaming red by the time she reached the elevator doors. Ack, he’d done it again! What was he thinking, staring at her like that? God she wanted to steal a glance over her shoulder, find out if he was still watching her. Biting her lip, she started to turn. “Well, hello, wedding planner.” The slow, slightly nasal voice belonged to her groom. No more coy and cutsie flirtations with Jason; time to get her head back in the game. Laine took a step back and offered up a platinum smile as she scanned the length of him, checking off the details. Hair, styled. Tux, clean and wrinkle free. Shoes, shined. Eyes…glassy. Not good. “Ed, looking very sharp.” “Glad you approve, lovely Laine.” She stiffened a bit, but flashed a wink to show what a charmer he was. “Melinda is never going to forget today. Say, have you got a bit of Visine up in your suite? Looks like you might have gotten something in your eye.” Something like weed, maybe. Shrugging, he gave her an accommodating smile that lingered just a second too long. “Sure, I’ve got something. We’ll ride up together.” “No, you go on ahead,” she offered, already stepping away from the elevator. “I’ve got to grab something down here and then I’ll head up to talk with Melinda.” It was probably just the pot, slowing his reactions, or maybe nothing at all. Still, Laine didn’t want to ride anywhere with this one. There was something about him she just didn’t trust. Not that she had to. She wasn’t the woman about to marry him. And besides, her
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark hesitancy to spend a second longer than necessary with him—or any of her grooms—probably had more to do with her past than theirs. * * * * * Jason watched as Laine brushed off the smarmy groom and headed for the back stairwell. His gaze tracked down the length of her body, over her long smooth legs, slim ankles and landed at the sexy, spiked heels she wore. She couldn’t be thinking about walking up just to avoid that guy. His stare narrowed as he looked back at the groom stepping into the elevator car, and he realized the guy was shamelessly watching Laine’s retreat. Figuring she might appreciate a legit excuse to skip the stairs, Jason turned, intending to catch her with a bit of business—just long enough for the groom to take off. As he opened his mouth to call her, a deep voice originating behind him resonated through the lobby. “Laine!” Jason hung back, feigning interest in his PDA, as some young guy jogged across the open floor and greeted Laine with a kiss on the cheek. Just out of eavesdropping distance, Jason watched through narrowed eyes as the guy chatted her up. He didn’t look like a client. She wasn’t giving him the pat, reassuring smile. It was something more subtle. Authentic, he realized with a slight tightening in his gut. “Jason?” the reception clerk called over the lobby noise from her desk. “Line six is about the cake. Do you want to take it?” Laine’s head popped up, and she looked over at him. She’d want to be in on the call. He glanced back at reception. “Tell him to hold a minute, I’ll be right there.” Laine was already walking his way, the guy right beside her, his head bent to hers in intimate conversation as they headed toward the exit. The guy was smiling wide. Laine’s head tilted back and—oh, shit— genuine laughter tittered out. As they passed, their voices became clear.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark “You know we’d be great together.” The guy turned around and started walking backward, keeping his eye on Laine as he headed toward the exit. “Just think about it.” She cocked a scrutinizing smile at him and nodded thoughtfully. “Okay, Max. I will.” Jason almost choked, his fists balled at his sides. He wanted to pound this Max for making a move on Laine in his hotel. Christ, who was he kidding? A hundred guys made moves on her, and right under his nose. It was the fact that this guy had gotten some genuine emotion from her that got under his skin. Damn, damn, damn. He’d wanted Laine for too long to let some punk come in and get the jump on him. Laine headed over Jason’s way and then walked with him toward the office. “Sorry. You didn’t have to wait.” “No problem. Let’s go find out about that cake.” Game face. Keep the game face. Don’t ask who he was, or what he wanted. You’ll look like a jackass. Be cool. No problem… Except that cool guys were never at a complete loss for words, and he couldn’t think of a damn thing to say. Back in his office, Jason hunched over the expansive desk and connected the line on speaker. “Okay, let’s have it.” “Jay, I’m coming up empty so far.” Not what he needed to hear. He wanted to be the man who made Laine’s dreams come true, not the schmuck who couldn’t get a freaking cake delivered. “There are literally hundreds of weddings scheduled to take place in this city alone today. Somewhere, some girl, wrapped up in her favorite terrycloth bathrobe and wearing a two hundred dollar veil, is sitting at home, crying her eyes out because the groom‐to‐be forgot his future father‐in‐law was there when he got a blowjob at the bachelor party the night before. Someone doesn’t need a cake.” The voice across the line was tight. “I’ll keep looking.” “Whatever it takes, just get it over here.” Disconnecting, he planted both hands on his desk and looked up at Laine as she leaned against the
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark doorframe to his office, rubbing one delicate foot while he struggled to make good on his promise. She cocked her head to the side, a cascade of shiny chestnut hair falling over her shoulders. “Well, that certainly is a romantic way to look at it.” “Save the indignation. You and I both know I’m right.” He didn’t like the sound of his voice. He was thinking about that guy, Max. The way his lips grazed her cheek. The echo of their words. “Think about it…” “I will…” “How about your groom today? The wedding is still on, so I’m assuming this one didn’t try any games of grab‐ass in the kitchen.” The words were out of his mouth before he’d found enough sense to stop them. He was being a prick, because he was jealous. Bringing up the almost‐wedding from three weeks ago, where the groom had gotten grabby with Laine, was a blow below the belt. If he could kick his own ass he would. “Oh, right. You saw that. So nice of you, by the way, to intervene on my behalf. That guy had me pinned against the room‐service cart.” Jason’s jaw clenched at the memory. He’d walked around the corner an instant before Laine’s knee rocketed through the hip‐high split in her gown and into the groom’s thigh. The man had gone down into a writhing ball, clutching his leg and screaming in pain. Laine wasn’t in any danger, but she’d been livid. Jason hadn’t trusted himself to approach them. The possessive rage that overcame him in that split second had every cell in his body calling for blood. The groom got off lucky with the girly dead‐leg assault; another second of unwelcome contact and Jason would have been on him… and the damage he’d have inflicted wouldn’t have left the bastard able limp out of the hotel. When the staff had rushed to her aid, Jason backed away, trying to get past the veil of red that blinded him to the idea of anything but punishment. “By the time I came in, it was done.” What a limp apology. He’d been a jackass to bring it up. But now that he had, there was
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark something he’d been wondering about. Trying to get back to a cavalier tone, he went fishing. “The bride’s mother walking in then was perfect timing, took the pressure off of you to do anything about it.” Laine fixed him with a hard stare, but he couldn’t stop. “Connie has a strict policy of one freebie for grab‐ass grooms, but this guy was serious. Would you have told the bride if her mother hadn’t been there?” Laine rolled her eyes and took a deep breath. “Connie almost fired me for not heading the mother off, but I wasn’t even going to try. I’m glad that girl found out what he was capable of, and on their wedding day no less. He deserved to lose her.” Her expression lost the fight she normally flaunted, and his chest tightened. “Besides, he was rough.” His fists balled at his side as he dragged the breath in through his nose. She’d been scared. She’d been scared, and three weeks later was still upset, yet he’d walked away, afraid that he would kill the man who’d threatened her. He should have. “I’m sorry, Laine.” She hadn’t exactly said that she would have told the bride, but it was close enough. He could see in her eyes that she knew Connie was wrong in her policies. Laine would have done the right thing if it had been left to her. He knew her. He shouldn’t have even asked. Her pouty mouth twisted up to the side, and the unflappable façade returned with her dismissive humph. She didn’t like to look vulnerable. She rarely let him see what she was really thinking for more than a moment at a time, but when her guard was down, he lost all resolve to stay unattached and indifferent. When Laine showed the real her, he wanted nothing more than to gather her into his arms and never let her go. When her guard returned, flying up to fend off his probing questions, and she offered him her most adversarial stare, he wanted nothing more than to get her underneath him, penetrate that false shell and touch the parts of her she couldn’t disguise. Either way, she had more control over him than he liked any woman to have. “Don’t be sorry. It was a lesson in prevention. I need to be more aggressive about keeping potential problem grooms reined in. No opportunities on my watch. ‘Day of’ cancellations kill reputations, and Connie can’t have that.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Jason curled his lip at Laine’s effort to sound callous. “Wow, Laine, you really are full service. Peddling that kind of romance every weekend, it’s no wonder you have a waitlist of brides clamoring after you.” Laine’s glare shot up at him. “Bite me, Jason.” He took one step toward her and dropped his voice. “If that’s what you like, give me the chance and I will.” The blush that flooded her face was as priceless as the way her eyelids fluttered, and her breath sucked in. The space between them sparked with heat and anticipation. She almost looked like she was considering the offer, and blood rushed to his cock in response. Laine looked away first, giving him the closest thing to a win over her he’d ever had. When she looked back it was all business. “Have you tried Dolce for a cake yet?” The question took him by surprise, but he should have seen it coming. She was going to play hardball. His mouth pinched into a tight line. “No. But be my guest. The phone’s right here.” Laine slipped her foot back into her heel and lazed across the carpet, taking a seat in the open club chair closest to the phone. She leaned forward, and for one split second, Jason thought he was going to be rewarded with the sight of her perfect breasts popping free from the top of her dress. He waited as she stretched, twisting until the full swell was nearly exposed, and his mouth watered for that last little bit of flesh, the cherry tip. God, he wanted her. He was hot, his cock erect within his pants, his chest feeling like he’d been rock climbing instead of lounging in his office, trying to find a cake to appease this sexy little wedding imp. Back in control, the tension she’d shown was gone. With one hand, her fingers danced over the number pad, while the other twirled the phone cord. Her hands were long and thin, elegant. She never seemed at a loss for what to do with them, and Jason couldn’t stop wondering what they would feel like on him. “Dolce? Hi, Laine Malone from Blissful Brides… I have an emergency. Is there anything you can do to get me a cake for three hours from now—” She yanked the phone away from her ear as the clerk on the
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark other end bellowed at her request. Jason let out a short laugh as he watched her, wondering how much she knew about the rift with Dolce. It couldn’t be much, or she would have thrown it in his face before this. Tried to use it for leverage in one of her notorious negotiations to get each bride’s most ridiculous fantasy met. She stared back at him with narrowed eyes and, when the bellowing ceased, pulled the phone back to her ear. “I’m at the Henley Hotel here and… hello?” she looked at the earpiece on the phone with shock, as though she thought it might explain why someone would have hung up on her. Ha. Apparently she didn’t know enough to keep her mouth shut about the location of the wedding. Her only shot would have been to offer to pick the cake up, or meet it at the intersection two blocks down. So much for Dolce. “No dice, eh?” Watching her incredulous expression, he wanted to laugh but tried to rein it in. She licked her lips and slowly settled the receiver back into its cradle. “He hung up on me. I know rude. I deal with it daily. But that was exceptional.” “They don’t do business that involves the hotel.” “So it would seem,” she said, eyeing him carefully. He cleared his throat and shrugged, then, keeping his tone matter‐ of‐fact, offered a half‐hearted explanation. “Dispute over a wedding a few years back.” “That must have been some dispute.” She wanted more answers, and he was half considering giving them to her when the partially open door slammed against the wall. Dil careened into the private office, his face red and dotted with sweat. “Jay, I’ve got a cake.” Laine flopped back against the chair. “Dil, I love you.” Oh sure. Dil brings her a cake and suddenly she’s in love. The guy always came through. “Fine, fine. Dil, we owe you. Laine, go deliver your cake news.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark She was up and dancing out the door in a flash. Jason glanced over at Dil with a smirk. “This one’s gonna cost me isn’t it?” Dil’s grin said it all. * * * * * Laine paused outside of the suite. Within, she could hear the hum of the bridal party in full consolation mode. Good luck to them, she thought, hearing the high pitched lash of the bride’s temper. Great. Bridezillas like Melinda Langdon were not the reason Laine got into the nuptials business. Not that it mattered. Blissful Brides was contracted to do a job, and every bride deserved a perfect day. So regardless of Melinda’s extreme nasty factor, Laine was determined to give her the day she always dreamed of. Pushing through the door, Laine had the sense of entering a world of snarky, back‐biting, silver‐wrapped Hershey’s kisses. The bridal party, shimmering in matching metallic gowns, bustled around, whispering insincerities and unfriendly speculations, while the bride‐to‐be sniffed loudly against the “something borrowed” heirloom lace hanky her mother had loaned her. Laine planted a near maniacal smile on her face and broke through the crowd. She would read as happy and confident. It was damage control time. Cutting through the swarm of formal wear, Laine widened her eyes and, at risk of severe cheek cramp, beamed an exaggerated smile. “Mel, the most incredible news. Jason Henley, the owner of the hotel, is having a fabulous new cake brought in just for you. I can’t believe it; he’s never done anything like this for a bride before, but he’s gotten his favorite bakery to make something special… just for you!” The giddy squeal at the end was as key to the sell as the mandatory “just for you” business, so she put everything she had into it before letting her delighted expression fall into faux concern. “Oh, my God, Mel,”—they were like sisters now—“has something happened?” Melinda’s shellacked lower lip stuck out like a roost for a small
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark bird. “My… my special day… it’s ruined!” She screeched, burying her face against Laine’s bare shoulder, leaving a cold, wet trail of what, God willing, was tears and tears alone. Melinda’s words choked off into unintelligible sobs, and suddenly she was just a girl with a lifelong dream on the verge of falling apart. Laine’s mind stopped running in business mode, and her body softened as Melinda quaked against her. Smoothing back the bride’s neat curls so they wouldn’t be crushed between them, Laine shushed out a long breath. “Come on now,” she soothed. “It’s all going to be fine. We’ve got the cake taken care of. But some silly cake isn’t what’s going to make this day special for you. It’s the beginning of your happily ever after. You and Ed are going to be man and wife. This is just one big party to celebrate… love. It can’t be ruined.” Melinda sniffed loudly; her body settled. Her small voice sounded stronger as she spoke over Laine’s shoulder. “But… this is my special day. What will my wedding be without my cake?” Of course. So much for that. “Okay, honey. The cake will be here and better than ever.” She ticked off her mental to‐do list: Dry clean hanky for mother of bride, makeup artist asap, order cucumbers for the bags, make sure the bar watered down the groom’s drinks, ream florist for the thorn in the bouquet, ream Jason for … the hell of it. The last thought made her smile. She’d keep a reaming slot open for him—something was bound to come up. She couldn’t believe he’d asked her to dinner. Melinda pulled back, her lips all puffy. “Oh, stop it this minute, Mel.” Laine pushed Jason from her mind and put on her best grandmother voice. “Nothing is ruined except this makeup, and there is no law against the beautiful bride getting a touchup. Now give me a smile.” Behind them the suite door opened to a chorus of Oohs and Ahhs. Laine spun around to see Jason smiling at the bridal attendants as though each were the vision they dreamed of being. A natural charmer. Finally, his gaze settled on Melinda, his eyes showing nothing but approval. The man had a game face all right. Pushing through the crowd, he walked up to the splotchy bride and dropped a chaste kiss on her cheek. “Beautiful.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Jason popped the cork on a bottle of champagne and toasted the bride. He was an operator, but he’d added to the calm of Bridezilla, so Laine was on his side. At the risk of looking like she had a tic, Laine offered up another wink. “I’m going to go check on some details. You girls enjoy a glass of champagne, and we’ll have everyone ready to walk down the aisle with time to spare.” She had a cake to confirm, a groom to check up on and crystallizing snot to chisel off her shoulder, so she needed to move. Jason turned to her and offered up a phony smile to top all others. “Ms. Malone, I’ll accompany you out. Enjoy the preparations, ladies!” Outside the suite, Laine turned on him. “What gives? Is there a problem with the cake?” “It’ll be here in fifteen minutes.” He extracted a white hanky with a flourish and sopped up the bit of gunk Melinda left behind on Laine’s shoulder. “Thank you.” He nodded, offering an exaggerated wink just to get under her skin. She couldn’t help but laugh. “My pleasure,” he said, guiding her by the elbow down the narrow hall. “How many attendants does the boo‐hoo bride have in there?” “Eleven maids, four juniors and two flower girls.” Jason’s brow arched. “Wow, is this the biggest bridal party you’ve handled?” She stole a sidelong glance at Mr. Chit‐Chat and rolled her eyes. “Yes, professionally, anyway.” Way to add the qualifier. It was an open invitation. She could have slapped herself. “That’s right; you’ve got a slew of married sisters. Six? What was the biggest bridal party?” “Sixteen maids.” “Bet your dad wished he’d had some boys in the mix.” Laine knew he was just trying to fill the dead space, but talking about Malone weddings wasn’t the most soothing experience for her. Jason glanced over at her. “You must have had a lot of experience with planning pretty early then. That what got you hooked to make a
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark career of it?” She ignored the question, trying to will it and the image it conjured—a tear‐streaked face vanishing down a distant corridor in a flurry of silk and sobs—out of her mind. At the end of the hall, Jason punched the down button at the bank of elevators. Swallowing hard, she shook off the memory and forced the practiced smile back to her lips. Jason stared at her, his clear blue eyes curious and intent. “What?” she snapped, hitting the already illuminated down button a few more times. “Nothing, just wondering what was behind that sad look you covered with your stock smile.” Her breath hitched in her throat. It was disconcerting to feel like he saw through whatever façade she put up. How was it that Jason, of all people, would be immune to her pretense? Was it that he saw her more clearly than everyone else, or, more likely, that the playboy/professional was so skilled in the art of masking emotions all her old tricks were transparent to him? Regardless of the answer, making light seemed an apt solution. “I’ll have you know, this smile is professional grade. It’s gotten more brides— with zits the size of spitballs, nasty mother‐in‐laws, and fights over china patterns—down the aisle than you could shake a stick at. Why? Because this smile… is effective. Makes people trust me. Don’t knock it because your professional smile is just a poor man’s version of mine.” There, she sounded flippant, fine, but deep in her core, she trembled. “What are you talking about?” Concern etched across his furrowed brow. Ack, he was infuriating, seeing everything she didn’t want him to see. Suddenly she felt hot, claustrophobic, like the neutral walls and subtly patterned carpeting were closing in around her. She didn’t want to talk with him about the hows and whys of Laine Malone; she didn’t want to think of them either. Enough of this. “I’m taking the stairs to clear my head. Thanks for the cake.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark “Laine—” he started, his fingertips grazing her elbow. Screams sliced down the corridor, cutting him off. Without a pause, Jason charged down the hall with Laine trailing behind. This was her floor—everyone booked on it was a wedding guest. Her heels dug in. Whatever it was, she’d manage it. The hallway T‐ed off, and Jason darted to the right, shouting into his phone for someone at the front desk as he vanished around the corner. The screams ceased, giving way to a barrage of obscenities from a voice all too familiar. Laine’s stomach lurched. Bridezilla. Rounding the corner, she nearly slammed into Jason’s back, hitting the wall instead to stop herself. Her eyes went wide as she took in the scene within the small soda and ice alcove. Jason grabbed for Melinda, trying to drag her back from Ed, who was frantically tucking his shriveled penis into his fly. One of the bridesmaids, half‐hidden behind him, had her silver, bubble‐hemmed dress bunched up around her boobs and her pantyhose around her ankles. There was no saving this day. * * * * * The reception hall was empty. It had been a mass exodus of tuxedos and taffeta dresses as the entire wedding party followed behind the bride and groom, who left the hotel screaming at each other. Everyone shouting into cell phones, booking flights back home early, bellowing threats at their would be in‐laws. People who would have been family, if fate hadn’t stepped in, in the form of a 5’8” blonde, bridesmaid cousin with flexible morals. Laine’s shoulders slumped as she stood within the small “prep” room off the reception hall. Staring at the enormous cake in front of her— delivered, in true insult to injury form, ten minutes after the wedding had imploded—her thoughts lost in how to convey the catastrophe to Connie. It wasn’t as though they wouldn’t get paid for their services—the bills got
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark paid whether the “I do’s” were said or not. It was a matter of reputation. The perception of bad luck and marriages that might have been was enough to close the doors for good. This was the second wedding Laine had coordinated that had been lost hours before the ceremony—and both within a month. She was screwed. Her stomach tensed; her eyes closed. Why did people want to get married if they couldn’t keep their hands from roaming into forbidden territory the very day of the ceremony? She could wonder all she wanted, but weddings brought out a side of some people she would never understand. A need to have it happen, to check it off their life list, regardless of the circumstances. “Damn it, damn it,” she muttered under her breath, not sure what she felt worse about, the fact that she hadn’t keep a tight enough rein on the grab‐ass groom, or the fact that she would even consider trying to keep a grab‐ass groom in check. At least it hadn’t been her call to tell the bride. Melinda had discovered the guilty parties herself. Laine had tried to talk to her, to make sure she was okay, but couldn’t get a word in edgewise between the string of ten decibel curses Melinda directed at the groom as she ran out with a strangely possessive groomsman tucking her under his shoulder. Maybe she’d be okay. Laine would call her later. The door shut behind her. She didn’t have the strength to see who it was, though she had a pretty good idea. Jason. “Do you need me out of here to clear all this?” she asked. “No, I told the staff to give us some privacy. They’ll wait. Shame, after so much work to get this cake in here, only you and I get to see it.” She nodded silently. “You okay?” His voice was as strong and soothing as the hands he laid on her bare shoulders. His thumbs pressed into the knotted muscles astride her spine and circled slowly. How did he always know where to find her when she needed a distraction from her head? Feeling exhausted from the wind up of the day, the efforts invested, Laine leaned back into his hands. She didn’t have it in her to haggle or argue. It was easier to just give in. “I’m fine. Frustrated. Connie’s going to
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark tan my hide for this.” Jason’s hands stopped moving at her neck. “Laine, Connie is a crusty old bat with a rawhide heart, but even she couldn’t object to this. The groom was giving it to a bridesmaid before the wedding. This would have been a marriage made in hell. It was doomed.” “I know, but it’s my job to make the wedding happen. It’s my livelihood. My chosen career. If I’d been on my toes instead of screwing around with you—” “Hey now, to my utter and eternal disappointment, there was no screwing going on. You were trying to make this cake materialize. The bride was better off finding out before the wedding. You can’t beat yourself up.” So easy for him to be confident in the morality of the situation. He wasn’t the one debating over whether he would have been able to do the right thing and tell if the circumstances of discovery had been different. He wasn’t the one with a job on the line. Or a past haunting him. “It’s my job, Jason, to make sure that weddings happen. Not to ensure the couple is a perfect fit. I’m not a matchmaker. I’m a wedding planner. I make it happen. I lose my job if I don’t.” “You don’t need to get so worked up about this. It’s just a job. You lose it, I’ll hire you here. No biggie.” He reached out and scooped up one tiny bit of frosting and dotted it on her nose. “It’s out of your control. Loosen up.” Loosen up? What in the hell? That was the final straw. Exasperated, Laine grabbed a solid handful of cake, spun on her stiletto and slung it into Jason’s stunned face. Her satisfaction lasted only an instant before she sucked in her breath with the horror of knowing she’d made a potentially monumental mistake. Jason reached up and swiped the buttercream and cake off his face, taking a menacing step toward her. Her hands shot up, palms out in a pacifying gesture. Shit, he looked like he meant business. “Okay, I’m sorry. Jason, I’m sorry, don’t— ” The wet glob of creamy frosting splattered across her face, and one
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark chunk of cake rolled down off her nose and into her cleavage. She wanted to scream, be angry, but her cheeks were betraying her, the corners of her mouth defying gravity and her need to look mad. Jason eyed the cake and then reached out and, with two fingers, swept the glob from between her breasts and popped it into his mouth. “Coconut,” he said, chewing thoughtfully. She stared, wide‐eyed. Dumbfounded by the affront. “You… you…” At a loss for words, she spun back for the cake and grabbed two fistfuls, ready to retaliate. His strong hands clamped onto her arms. “Whoa, that’s enough.” Tired of circumstances beyond her control, Laine decided to take destiny by the reins. The cake was going all over him. She pulled at his grip, twisted and…slipped from his grasp, launching face first into the second tier. “Whoops,” came the muffled concession from behind her, sounding less than sincere. Baked confection erupted from her mouth, sweet spongy goodness embedded down the cleavage of her dress, frosting, greasy and slick, smeared across the swells of her breasts and face. Her hands fisted tightly, and a strangled moan of fury erupted from her depths. It must have sounded like pain, because in a flash Jason was by her side, trying to take her hand and pull her away from the destroyed desert. He wished. Laine wrapped one hand around his wrist and planted her feet for the best leverage, all under the pretense of accepting his assistance, and then yanked back using everything she could muster to throw Jason into the cake behind her. He had to outweigh her by nearly a hundred pounds—she never would have gotten away with it but for the slick stretch of frosting smearing the carpet underfoot. He toppled forward and, suddenly, Laine was going down with him, and, dear God, she was afraid he’d crush her. He spun around and, landing on his back, pulled her down on top of him. The cake cart shot forward, the cake itself collapsing underneath their bodies. Eyes wide, Laine tried not to laugh as she stared down into Jason’s
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark stern face. Bits of frosting and crumbs gave him a stuccoed complexion— so very not the perfectly groomed man she was accustomed to doing business with. Of course, that perfectly groomed man would never have his arm circled around her waist the way he did now, would never look at her with the smoldering stare that was suddenly setting her on fire. Laine lay on top of him, her legs together in a stiff line along Jason’s body, her arms folded up under her breasts as some sort of defense against the hard planes of his muscular torso. He wore his clothes well, but lying on top of him gave her a new appreciation for what rippled beneath his Zenga suits. She looked down at herself and felt her cheeks heat. Her breasts looked like giant frosted melons swelling up between them. Melons with berry garnish. Her nipples had popped completely free of the ruined gown and pointed up through a sheen of greasy frosting at Jason. Slowly, she turned her gaze up to meet his. The look in his eyes left little question as to what he was thinking and nervous anticipation began to simmer within her. Suddenly, the arm around her waist tightened and Jason rolled them over so that Laine was underneath him, squishing into a pillow of desert for two‐hundred‐fifty. He pushed himself up on one arm, his hips resting against her, his legs tangled with her own, the hard bulge of his cock at her abdomen. Heat pooled in her belly, and every nerve danced with an electric charge across the surface of her skin. Her lips parted, shallow breaths mingling between them. “You started it.” Her hushed words seemed to absorb all other sound around them. Jason’s eyes narrowed inches above her. “I was trying to cheer you up.” Biting her bottom lip, she gazed up at him. All she wanted was to run her frosting slicked fingers through the dark slash of straight hair falling across his brow, pull his face down to her and lick the buttercream off the strong lines of his jaw. She wanted him, but their relationship was based on little more than a mutual love of sparring. She didn’t know any other way to be with him. “You still started it.” The solid columns of muscle that pinned her at either side
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark tightened in; his knee shifted, nudging between her thighs. Lowering his head, Jason had only one retort. “Fine…Now, I’m finishing it.” His mouth met hers in a slow, sinking press of hard against soft. A measured rub of tender skin caressed back and forth with increasing pressure until the tip of his tongue touched the corner of her mouth and traced across the seam of her lips in a devastating assault. Desire swirled through her, overcoming her mind as she wrestled with the possibilities and repercussions. The kiss, all coercion and confidence, demanded she open to him. It was an exercise in restraint Laine couldn’t endure. Her lips parted on a soft gasp, and Jason’s tongue delved into her mouth, thrusting deeply and retreating in a rhythmic promise that sent a shuddering need racing through her core. The hungry, wet velvet rub of his tongue against her own pushed her over the edge, swept away all thoughts of consequence and a primal, desperate need took control of her body. Their heads angled, deepening the kiss. Her hips pressed up against the ridge of his erect cock, her hands splayed wide across his chest, stroked over the muscles, the heel of her palm testing the unyielding resistance. He felt too good, so far beyond her wildest, most forbidden fantasy— Suddenly she tensed, breaking away from the kiss with a desperate, “please,” as she turned her head to the side and squeezed her eyes closed, her hands fisting against his shirt. What was she doing? This was a risk to her job, her career. This wasn’t what she was supposed to be doing—and he was the last person she should be doing it with. Jason might be certain he could handle the aftermath of a fling like this with total professionalism, but Laine wasn’t so sure she could guard against emotion. Dependency. Expectation. Her breath came faster with the encroaching anxiety, and Jason pressed a slow kiss against the side of her neck below her ear. “Don’t think yourself out of this, Laine.” His words were ragged, husky. “Can’t you feel what’s between us?” She could feel it. It was huge and hard and she wanted it. And now, having had a taste, she wondered if she backed out, would ever stop thinking about it? Catching her chin, he tilted her face toward his. Jason looked into
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark her eyes, and then ran his hand down the line of her arm to her fist. Pulling it up to his mouth, he kissed her knuckles, lapping at the frosting between them with his tongue, until her balled hand flexed open, and his tongue flicked against the connective tissue between her fingers, sending waves of wet heat flooding between her legs. “Give in,” he groaned against her skin as he licked and kissed his way back up her inner arm to where the soft flesh of her breast swelled beneath the joint. Pushing down the fabric of her dress, he cupped the globe, squeezing gently as if to test her for ripeness. The warmth of his hands melted the frosting between them into a slippery gloss covering her skin. “Let me have you,” he breathed across her chest as his fingers slid from the wide base of her breast out toward the nipple in one seamless caress that stopped just shy of the erect tip. He lowered his head and licked a slow circle around the outer areola, pausing mid‐orbit to nip at the fleshy mound before suckling the sting away. “Laine.” The sound of her name on his lips, rough and desperate, pushed her beyond her senses, and all restraint broke. Clinging to his shoulders, she rocked against him, her knee skimming up the side of his thigh and hip to ease the throbbing ache in her sex. His hips pressed down, shifting with a steady pressure as he continued to feast on her body. He grazed the candy‐hard tip of her nipple with his teeth. “Please,” she gasped, and he lowered his mouth around the erect nub and drew it in with a suction that pulled deep through her core and made her moan and beg again. She grabbed at his shoulders, fumbled down his back and settled against his butt. Gripping the base of muscle, she pulled him against her before following the line of his belt around to the front. Breath coming in steady pants, she struggled with the buckle wedged between them, while he suckled at her breast. Her mind was lost in the rhythmic pull across her body. Her core throbbed with an aching need to be filled, and she gasped. “Jason.” Pulling off her nipple, Jason ran his tongue up the side of her breast, across her collarbone and through the hollow at the center of her
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark slender neck. It was heaven to feel her writhing under him. Watching her for so long, wondering what it would be like to hold her, to kiss her, taste her—nothing could have prepared him for the ecstasy of her surrender. He’d tried to resist, to maintain the context of work only between them, but every time he saw her, something new and special caught his attention. The smell of her hair, the way she walked, her devotion to her clients… the way he sometimes found her looking at him with soft eyes that held a million questions. Now, as she looked up at him, her warm brown eyes still questioned, but they burned with a need he longed to satisfy. Supporting himself with one arm against the floor, he slid the other under her back to unzip her dress. She arched into him, facilitating his efforts until he knelt back and slid the saturated gown off her svelte form. She wore only panties, a simple pink swatch of silk darkened with her wet need. Laine propped herself up on her elbows, an impish smile playing on her lips. Biting her bottom lip, she looked down at the panties and slipped her thumbs into the tiny string waist. Beneath lowered lashes, she gazed back up at him. “These are all wet and ruined. What are you going to do about them?” A rough laugh escaped with his breath at the challenge he was more than ready to meet. “I’ve got some ideas, don’t you worry.” His cock was fully erect, pressing against the front of his slacks, but it would just have to wait. The corner of her mouth twisted up in an anticipating smile as he backed down to kiss her knee. Lapping at the sugary sweet frosting, he worked higher up her inner thigh to the hollow aside her juncture. With one hand stroking lightly over the damp patch of fabric, he followed with his mouth, breathing warmth through the sodden strip. Her hips tilted up to meet the pointed tip of his tongue as he ran it through the sensitive valley of her pussy. The sultry moan that escaped her drove him on, pushing him to his limits. Drawing in her musky scent, he had to taste her, had to feel her pleasure against his mouth, around his cock, again and again. He didn’t think he’d ever be able to get enough. His hands slipped up to the slim
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark hem at the top of her panties, and as he pushed his tongue against her opening through the fabric, his fists twisted, snapping the band. She cried out, spasming against his mouth, sending waves of pulsing heat down his cock. He was never going to last. He pulled the fabric from between them, revealing her smooth sex, shiny and glistening with her juices. Teasing between her plump lips with his tongue, he tasted the residual sweet of cake mingling with the tang of her essence. It was heaven. Greedy for more, he delved into her channel, making her gasp and buck. He lapped through her depths until her fingers sifted into his hair, pulling him closer as she rocked against his face. Running his tongue back up her pretty pink folds, he slipped a finger inside her, stroking the wet interior as his tongue sought out her hard clit. He thrust into her with a second finger, and her tight walls hugged against him, making him desperate to feel them hugging his cock. He wanted her to come again and again, wanted to give her so much pleasure she wouldn’t be able to think of anything but the feel of his body satisfying hers. He circled her clit faster, stroked it with the flat of his tongue, all the while feeling her body’s response intensify as it constricted around his fingers. “God! Yes,” she gasped, as he scraped over her sensitized bundle of nerves with his teeth and then sucked the little jewel between them. Her hips bucked and every part of her seemed to move in symphony with the suction of his mouth and stroking of his tongue, until she came in a chorus of screams against him. The fingers wound in his hair spiraled free, seeking purchase on the shoulders of his shirt—yanking at it, trying to pull it free. Jason was a man willing to accommodate. Anxious to feel the rasp of her hard nipples against his flesh, he reached back and jerked his shirt over his head, tossing the garment to the side with her discarded gown. He unclasped his slacks, and his cock sprang free through the opening of his boxers. Laine sat up, naked, legs spread, her swollen pussy lips slick from his attention. Her eyes still maintained that faraway quality of the recently satisfied, making him throb with renewed need to meet her there.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Her gaze tracked down his body to his cock and held. Quickly, he found his wallet and retrieved a condom. He needed to be inside of her, fast. His throat tightened. “Laine, I’ve got to have you.” His voice was thick and gravelly, desperate as he rolled the rubber over his aching shaft. Laine lay back, her arms twined loosely above her head, and whispered, “Have me.” It was almost more than he could stand to keep from thrusting deep and hard into her right then. Muscles tensed, he leaned over her and ran his hands up the length of her arms to circle her wrists and pull them higher over her head. Heat flashed in her eyes as she tested his hold, and when he didn’t give, her lips parted, trembling, as her halting breath came faster. “Jason,” came her urgent plea. Pressing the thick head of his cock against her opening, he eased into her tight, wet passage. Laine’s eyes closed, and she slid one bent knee high up his back as he pushed slowly inside her, deeper and deeper, until their bodies met in a hungry kiss of flesh. He pulled back and then sank deep again, savoring her quiet gasp as his shaft nudged her womb. Thrusting steadily, his every penetrating stroke claimed her body until soft friction and measured movements gave way to reckless contact, and their bodies were covered in a sheen of sweat and slapped together with each driving thrust. Jason felt his balls contract, and the nerves throughout his body spark to life, lending to the sensation of impending release. Laine cried out, her inner walls constricting with hard rhythmic pulses around his cock, as she begged him to take her harder, faster. Gasping, she spasmed wildly around him, demanding his thundering release. He roared as his body tensed in pleasured agony, and his seed spurted out into the condom. * * * * * They’d made love… in a cake. Who knew how much time had passed since Jason, sated and fatigued, pulled her on top of him and closed his eyes. Laine had lost track of her place in the world the instant
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark his mouth grazed hers. When they touched, every part of her body, every part of her mind, blurred into one driving need to merge with the man who made her insane. Her heart was pounding in her chest—what was she doing? Jason was too much of a risk. She thought about him too often, too intensely, to keep her heart from getting involved. And, worse yet, the reality of him exceeded her fantasies by far. Her phone rang. The muffled digital trill of Here Comes the Bride sounded from somewhere beneath the mush of cake and cream, indicating that Connie was the caller. Laine’s head snapped up, her eyes wide. She was buck‐naked, sprawled atop the sleeping form of Jason Henley in what could only be described as a ruined prep room at the Henley Hotel. The remains of the cake were embedded in the carpet and her every nook, cranny and crease. What in the hell had she been thinking? Frantic her boss somehow sensed that Laine had taken the perilous path and fallen into bed—er, on the floor—with their number one partner in the wedding industry, Laine was desperate to clarify to her—to anyone—the one‐time nature of the whole thing. Pushing up on hands and knees astride Jason’s prone form, she tried to crawl off of him. Her knee slid out and her elbow jutted into his rib. “Umph…” “Shit—shit!!” she squeaked, digging through cake and clothing. Jason’s warm hand pressed against her back as he pulled her down to lave a wet kiss over her nipple before sucking the rosy tip into his mouth. “Shi—mmm,” She arched back and her nipple escaped the suction. “Jason, damn it! I need that phone. It’s Connie calling. I have to explain.” “Okay, okay. Find your phone; talk to Connie.” Jason sat up and helped Laine get off of him. “Sounds like it’s coming from that pile of mush next to the cart.” Laine crawled through the soggy mess and felt her way until she encountered the slim phone. She flipped it open with a small spray of sugar sludge and answered breathlessly. “Connie, I’m here. Sorry, I couldn’t—” Connie’s smoke‐worn voice snapped through the phone with more
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark force than her two‐pack a day Virginia Slims habit should have allowed. She wasn’t happy and she wasn’t mincing words. This was a fuck‐up in her book, and she had a strict policy of three strikes and you’re out. This was Laine’s second. After a few minutes of listening to Connie’s tirade, Laine swallowed hard and found her voice. “Connie, you are absolutely right, and I take full responsibility for dropping the ball here. I should have been on him more. Okay, I’ll see you in—” She looked down at her body and the tendrils of hair smeared with frosting. “Tomorrow… Yes, it’s going to take me a while to clean up a few details here… okay, see you then.” Looking back over her shoulder, she saw Jason reclined against a toppled chair—his chiseled body streaked with soggy cake and frosting. He was so perfect. She wanted to crawl over and lick him from head to toe, detouring in the middle until he came in her mouth. How could a man with a glob of buttercream above his ear look so damn sexy? Shaking her head clear, she smiled and, working at a casual sound, winked at him. “Thanks, I needed that.” Jason’s brow furrowed a bit, and then he shrugged his shoulders in dismissal. “Welcome. So how about a shower and something in a size six, maybe, from the boutique?” “Wow, you really are full service. I don’t suppose you have any idea how I might get to a shower without being seen by the staff?” “Sorry, can’t guarantee that for you, but the elevators are just around the corner. Let’s get the table drape from under the cake here, and we’ll wrap it around you. Do you want the dress and shoes on or are you going buff underneath? Buff is my preference, but I’d keep you that way every minute of the day if I could, so you might want to decide for yourself.” The way he looked her over had her body responding with a renewed pulse of need. She wanted to feel him buried inside her again, and maybe again after that. God, every touch had been perfect, intense. “I’ll wear the shoes. It’s more dignified, don’t you think?” He laughed and, leaning forward, grabbed the sapphire blue strapped heels and reached out for Laine’s leg. Pulling her toward him, he
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark caressed the ball and arch of her foot, stroked the heel, circled her ankle with the tip of his finger. He slipped on the sparkly shoe, carefully buckled the thin strap and ran his palm up her calf. Under his spell, she let him move her leg so that her heeled foot was planted on the carpet, her knee bent, offering Jason an unobstructed view of her frosting smeared thighs and sex. He took her other foot into his hands and rubbed it briefly before working the tiny buckle into place. With a soft caress, he planted her other foot wide apart, leaving him access to her wet center. Looking up at him with wonder at the sensuality he infused into every act, she whispered, “Okay, maybe just one more time.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark
Chapter Two Saturday, the twelfth of June “You’re an asshole,” Laine said, setting up the white silk guest book with a ballpoint, plumed pen. “So you tell me. Keep it up, and I might develop a complex.” Jason had been following her around while she set out the place cards for the reception, worked with the florist and checked in on her security detail—a guy on payroll assigned to be ever‐present in the groom’s company. There would be no opportunity for dalliance. There would be no third strike. Of course that meant keeping fuck‐ups that stressed out brides to a minimum, which meant keeping her mind off of Jason, the incredible, confusing lay from last week. “I can’t believe you partnered with Connie, had me assigned exclusively to your hotel, and didn’t even have the courtesy to speak to me about it first.” Grabbing the box of Jordon almond bundles in pink tulle, he followed her from setting to setting as she distributed the favors to the parents’ table. “I called you three times this week. I tried to talk to you when you were here on Wednesday and yesterday. Not my fault you’re too chicken to spend five minutes alone with me. Besides, you were already assigned to the Henley brides. Connie and I just put a few details down in ink.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Dragging a long breath in through her nose, Laine tried to rein in her emotions. “Why would you need to do that? And I am not chicken, so get your ego in check. I’m busy. You might have noticed it’s June. High season. I don’t have a lot of free time right now.” She paused her bustling and glanced up at Jason. “Besides, we work together. This can’t be a good idea.” “There are more important things than business. But you’re ‘busy’ now, that’s fine, we’ll find time where we can and then in July I’ll take you up to the cottage—” “Okay, Jason…this is how each setting should look…exactly. I’ve got to run up and see Gloria to make sure the buttons on her dress got fixed. Make sure your people get every spot exactly the same.” She offered her most professional, insincere smile, knowing he would see through it in a second flat, and sprinted out of the reception hall for the main lobby. There wasn’t time for this kind of chit‐chat, and the last thing she needed was another distraction. The job was important; the career was important; more important than whatever fling Jason had in mind. He was a world class player, everyone knew it. Laine had no problem with it either. If she went into the relationship with a no strings attitude, she wouldn’t get hurt. But that meant keeping her emotions from spiraling out of control. So long as she played by her rules, got out fast and didn’t let some little thing like a crush get the better of her, she would be all right. Life was about choices, and she was making her own. Of course, it surprised her to no end that he had called throughout the week, and she was doing her damnedest to keep her heart from fluttering into overdrive each time she saw his number on the caller‐ID display. She’d given in the week before, without thought of consequence, because the temptation had been too great. But when their sexy tryst was over, she’d expected he’d never mention it again. Only Jason hadn’t brushed her off. He hadn’t dismissed her to work with some flunky manager at the hotel. He’d called, and when he hadn’t gotten her on the phone, he’d waited until today and spent the better part of the morning not taking no for an answer.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark She had to keep her distance from him if she had any chance of getting through the wedding without giving in to whatever tawdry suggestion he proposed. He’d probably try to drag her off to the coatroom during dinner. Make a bed of fur coats and run his big heavy hands up her thighs… No! It was June, so there wouldn’t be any fur coats, and she was a professional, so there wouldn’t be any coatroom nookie either. Today, she was all business, and there would be one happy bride and groom at the day’s end to attest to it. * * * * * The sunset ceremony went off without a hitch. Laine stood back and watched as the photographer snapped the last group shots of the wedding party in the rose garden. Everything was perfect. She’d checked the reception hall a half hour ago, and Jason’s team had come through, delivering immaculate presentation. This was the kind of day that lured the romantics into the wedding industry. The kind of day where it was easy to believe in true love and forever. The bride and groom stared at each other with absolute adoration, and Laine felt a sudden pang of envy. These two wouldn’t have cared if the cake had been a Sara Lee. They wouldn’t have cared if the flowers smelled like swamp. All they cared about was being together. Couples like this made romance contagious. Laine looked around at the guests milling in the background and wondered how many of them would be signing up for next June’s big show. Quite a few, she suspected. Everything was perfect, and yet something gnawed at her. She felt off. Distracted, disjointed. “Looks like you’ve got a winner this week.” Laine smiled over her shoulder as Jason walked up to her, suddenly aware of what she had missed. “Yep, so far so good. Just keep your bellboy away from the cake. These two deserve the one they ordered.” “Well, I’ll admit that a part of me wants to sabotage it, just so we have one to play in, but something tells me the same excuse wouldn’t
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark work two weeks in a row.” Her cheeks flushed warm at the mention of their icing escapade. Trying to hide the effect of his reference, she shook her head. “Excuse? What could you possibly have said—” “Seizure. The staff is really worried about you, but I told them to be kind. You were embarrassed enough as it was.” “You didn’t tell them I had a seizure.” “They were really concerned. Good people I have.” Laine couldn’t help but laugh. God, she’d almost died of embarrassment sprinting into the elevator to Jason’s apartment. Then two days later, at a tasting, she’d almost orgasmed when they served her a slice of coconut cake with buttercream frosting. She’d been tempted to order a slice to go, but it seemed wrong to partake without Jason, and there was no way she’d be chasing him down for another go round. Brushing a strand of her hair back, Jason stood behind her and leaned close to her ear. “These two have got it right. Today’s about love for them. These are the couples I like to watch.” Her heart stuttered as her shoulders warmed with the close proximity of Jason’s chest. She leaned back into him and watched the bride and groom ruin a picture by falling into a kiss and ultimately eliciting a round of cheers from the wedding party. “Yeah, me too. They didn’t stop smiling through the entire ceremony. I even saw them laugh at one point, some small joke between them. Made everyone feel like falling in love.” “Maybe everyone should.” She blinked twice, swallowed hard. Turning her head slowly, she met his gaze. “Maybe.” The photos were done, and the bride and groom were walking toward Laine. Jason gave her bottom a little pat and turned to head back inside, letting Laine direct the happy couple in their next activities. Cocktails on the sixth floor balcony, and then across to the reception hall for dinner and dancing. * * * * *
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Jason leaned forward in the chair in his office, elbows resting on knees, one hand yanking at his hair, the other fisting the phone against his ear. He didn’t want to be making this call. Didn’t want to have to think about the woman whose slow sultry voice poured through the line like acid into his ear. “What do you want?” came her lightly‐accented demand. “You know what I want, Sophia. Don’t play games with me.” “Well… you knew what I wanted, but I didn’t get it, now did I?” Jason sat up and spun in his chair so it faced the back wall of his office. “How’s Enrique?” “Who?” A long pull on a thin cigarette filtered through the line, conjuring a million unwanted memories. He waited her out. “Oh, of course. Enrique. I barely remember his name. It seems he meant more to you than to me.” His hand balled, his lips pressed together in a hard line. “Sophia, think of this as a business opportunity.” Another drag and a short laugh. “But Jason, I always have.” Gritting his teeth, he berated himself. Even now she had power over him. It infuriated him that she maintained that control—that she could influence his emotions in the slightest. Young and stupid, he had blindly given her that control and, when she’d abused it, he’d spent years defending himself against any such marauder again. No one got close enough to touch his heart. No one mattered. And then Laine strolled into his life and, bit by bit, chipped away his resolve. He’d fought against it, told himself it was too late, but in the end all she had to do was walk into a room and he was smiling. All he had to do was think of her, and everything seemed better. Everything was better. Laine. His fists relaxed, and he leaned back in his chair, letting go of his anger. “Good, then, Sophia. We should have no problem coming to an agreement.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Following some debate, they worked out a time and set up a meeting. Jason hung up the phone and pulled open the center drawer on his desk, slipping out a single photo that lay atop the clutter. It was Laine, leaning against a pillar in the lobby. She was watching one of her brides kiss the groom before they left the hotel. Jason had seen the photographer snapping photos that day and paid him off for the shot. It was money well spent. Jason stared at the sweet smile on her face. He was a fool for waiting so long to go after her. From the beginning, she was the woman he coveted, the one who stirred feelings he was unwilling to act on. For so long he thought he could be satisfied with a relationship that didn’t breach the professional barrier between them. Being close to her made him feel alive, challenged, interested. And under the pretense of building up the nuptial business, he was able to spend time with her without the risk of getting in too deep. He’d gone on like that for nearly a year, fantasizing about her, but refusing to move. Pretending that he didn’t need more. That he hadn’t fallen completely in love with her. But when she’d been threatened, something snapped inside him, and he couldn’t pretend anymore. He wanted to be the man she ran to, the man to comfort her, to hold her, to make the jackass who though he had the right to touch her pay. He wanted her. She hadn’t taken him seriously last week when he’d asked her out. And even after they’d made love, she didn’t seem sure of his intentions or her own feelings about them. But Jason knew what he wanted. He wanted Laine, and he was going to do whatever it took to convince her that he was worth taking a chance on. * * * * * The cake was served, the band played and the mandatory dances and events had been accomplished without a single snag. In short, Laine’s job was complete. She slumped back in her chair and reached for the flute of champagne that had been waiting for two hours. It was flat and warm, but it didn’t matter, she was ready to toast herself for a day without flaw. Her fingers no more than grazed the glass when it was swept out of
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark her reach and another fizzing flute presented. She looked up into Jason’s face. “Nothing worse than flat champagne.” He was staring again, that possessive, sexy stare. “I guess you’re my hero, then.” “You’ve finally noticed. Have a sip of that bubbly and take a spin around the dance floor with me. They’re playing our song.” Laine paused with the flute half way to her lips. She had no idea what kind of dancer Jason was, but the song was slow and smooth, and she didn’t think she’d get her feet stepped on too much since it was already half over. What the hell. After savoring a long, sweet sip of champagne, she offered her hand to Jason and allowed him to escort her onto the floor. With a smooth sweep of his arm, he circled her into his chest and proceeded to lead. He was easy to follow and, though it wasn’t anything flashy or complicated, dancing with Jason made her feel like Ginger Rogers. He was good. She could get used to the solid feel of his body against her own, the gentle press and pull of his warm palm against her the small of her back, the rub of his thighs against her hips. Moist breath swirled around her ear as Jason bowed his head toward hers. “So in July, when I take you to my cottage, pack light. Or don’t bother packing at all. I’m planning to keep you naked for the entire Sunday to Wednesday stay. No worries, you won’t miss a single Saturday. You can bring a suitcase filled with those high heels I love so much. Wear them when you’re feeling formal. But I want to see you naked every second I’m with you.” Laine’s smile froze in place; heat pooled in her belly and swirled lower as she listened to the promise of things to come if she accommodated his desire to keep her naked for a little trip. He knew what to say and how to say it. He was so confident. Like he knew she wanted to comply, to strip for him that very minute to see what reward there would be for pleasing him. Damn he was so good, too good. Dangerously good. She tried to pull away, but his hold on her was firm. “No way, I’ve been waiting all week to get this close to you. You’re
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark done for the night. I think it’s time you said your goodbyes and got on with your own plans.” Her heat beat faster, and she felt the skin across her chest heat as her nipples tightened and rose against the peach silk sheath she wore. “Jason…” What did she even want to say? Maybe it was just the need to have his name on her lips, but it was all she could get out. The hand that held hers between their chests slipped free, Jason’s fingers traced over her collarbone, lower to the deep neckline of her dress. His touch was electric. “I want you,” he whispered, his lips grazing the outer ridge of her ear. “I can’t stop touching you. I want to stroke the softest parts of you, taste your sweetness.” Laine shuddered in his arms. She sounded breathless to her own ears. “Let’s get out of here.” * * * * * The elevator doors swooshed shut, and Jason pulled her into his arms, his mouth crushing against hers as he backed her against the mirrored wall. “What if the doors open?” she gasped, not really caring if some geriatric tourist was in the elevator with them that instant, so long as Jason kept touching her. “It’s going to the penthouse, no stops until the top, no security.” Laine’s gaze fixed on their reflection in far wall. “I like to see us together like this. It’s sexy,” she gasped as he sucked at the tender skin beneath her jaw. Jason’s head rose, and he followed her gaze over his shoulder. Stepping to the side so that more of her was revealed, he smiled. “Very. Take off the dress for me, and I’ll show you sexy.” Her heart stalled in her chest as he took a step back, crossing his arms over his chest, waiting. The promise of more heat to come was too tempting to pass up, and she found herself unzipping the side of gown, her eyes locked with his. With one hand across her breast she used the
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark other to slip the spaghetti straps off her shoulders and then let the dress fall into a pool at her feet, except for her hold on the single strap. She stepped out of the gown, and slipped it over the side of the rail mounted to the wall. Sex was great, but she had to have something to wear to these weddings. Jason knelt down beside her and helped her out of the lacy underwear, tucking them into his suit jacket pocket. “For safekeeping,” he said with a laugh. Stroking the back of her thigh down to her ankle and up again with a feather soft touch, he pointed to her reflection across the car. “You’re beautiful, Laine.” Chills danced across her bare skin, tightening her nipples into crinkled points. She loved it when he said her name. “You make me feel that way.” “I’ll make you feel even better.” Taking both her hands, he pressed them against the rail behind her and then cupped her calf, guiding it up until he draped it over his shoulder. He ran his mouth against the lips of her sex, parting them with his tongue for one teasing taste. “I want you to watch yourself when I make you come. There’s nothing sexier than the look on your face at that moment.” The elevator doors opened at the side to Jason’s apartment, and with a quick movement, he reached over to the panel and hit the stop button. Turning back, he buried his face between her legs. She gasped at the pull of his mouth against her clit. Jason was wrong. There was nothing sexier than the man making love to her with his mouth at that moment. His hand snaked up the side of her torso, seeking out her breast and brushing her nipple with the pad of his thumb. She panted, watching her reflection, fully nude, obscured only by Jason’s dark hair moving back and forth as he devoured her sex. Her skin was pale, dotted by a flush of red across her chest and neck where the blood beneath the surface had started a slow boil. Hips rocking with the motion of his mouth, Laine let her head loll back against the wall, the coil of desire twisting tighter within her. Her breath came faster. She gripped the rail behind her as though she clung to
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark it for dear life. Suddenly, the sound of Here Comes the Bride filled the small elevator, drowning out her pleasured gasps. Laine’s hands fisted against the rail. “No,” she cried. “God, I’m so close! Ignore it, please.” Jason didn’t seem to have much problem doing just that, the tiny music played for a few more seconds before the call went to voice mail and the elevator was again echoing only the sounds of wet kisses and groans as Jason pleasured her. Keeping her eyes riveted on their reflection, she climbed toward orgasm fast. Jason’s hand pulled and played with her nipple while his mouth worked her sex. He squeezed the tip of her nipple as he tongued her channel. She was so close, so wet, her body clenched and pulsed with every plunge, pinch and lap. Her breath was ragged, her moans persistent. And the phone started playing again. “Agh!” She crashed down several rungs on the pleasure ladder, but Jason’s hands shifted—one on to her ass, where he pulled her closer against him as he circled her clit, and the other down to her silk clutch on the floor. Thank God, he was going to turn the damn thing off. But just as she’d started to relax back into the rhythm of his feast, he held the phone up in front of her face…open and connected! He sucked her erect clit between his teeth, making her yelp as she grasped the phone. “Laine? Laine? This is Connie, what’s going on? The wedding— how was it?” Laine stared at the phone in horror as Jason nibbled the erogenous bundle of nerves at her center. What could she do? He’d connected the call! “Connie,” her voice sounded husky and thick. “The wedding…sooo good...” “Well, good. You deserve it after last week. Have you spoken to the florist about replacing the tulips for the Masters/Felps wedding?” Laine’s brain struggled to follow and decipher the words coming through the phone… She let her head fall back, wondering if she could
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark just hang up, explain later that there had been bad reception… All she wanted was to slide onto Jason’s cock and ride him into oblivion. The pleasure was more than she could bear. The pressure against her clit increased, jarring her out of her trance. He was circling hard with the pointed tip of his tongue and slipping two fingers inside her while he did it. She was going to come on the spot—no, on the phone with her boss! “Yes… yes… Yes, Connie, it’s taken care of.” She rushed. “Now’s not a… mmm… so good… time. Let me call you…uuuhhh… tomorrow with more details… bye—” She could hear Connie’s goodbye as she flipped the phone closed and disconnected the call. Tossing the phone aside, she wound her fingers into Jason’s hair as sharp, pulsing waves crashed through her body. Screaming, she came against his mouth. * * * * * Laine was wrapped around Jason, her naked arms and legs like a vice, her kisses covering his face, hair and neck—she was chaos in a pleasured assault showering down on him. With Laine in his arms, his suit pants at his knees, her dress in his teeth, Jason staggered out of the elevator into his apartment, slammed Laine’s bare back against the foyer wall. Dropping the dress over the secretary table, he gritted his teeth. “I need you. God, hurry,” she cried against his neck, wriggling against his cock, trying to pull herself over it. “The bedroom… just a few feet away,” he promised them both, grinding against her wet pussy with a groan, using all his restraint to wait for the condom in the bedside table. “The bedroom,” she gasped, with a sultry, teasing laugh. “I’m honored. I thought your dates never saw the inside of your apartment.” A fresh assault of kisses and bites rained down over his neck and ear. “After my shower here last week, tonight will be twice already—those hotel gossips are worthless for reliable information.” Jason almost stopped dead. It was true. He never felt right bringing
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark women back to the penthouse. It was where he went to sleep, not to fuck his casual dates. But it hadn’t even occurred to him that he wouldn’t bring Laine up here. He’d been fantasizing about luring her into his bed for months. In his head she belonged in his apartment, in his space, spending time with him. Forever. Still, it wasn’t what he’d expected to hear as he tumbled through the apartment with her in his arms. The fact was, none of the rules he lived by seemed to matter in the context of Laine Malone. She was worth the risk… to everything. As quickly as the thought entered his mind, it fled with Laine’s words. “I’m about to come just from touching you. Hurry, I want you inside me…” He was done for. * * * * * Pillows, shoes, sheets, and an array of discarded clothing covered the floor, making Laine’s tiptoed trek across the dimly lit bedroom a treacherous one. She picked through one pile, then moved on, picking through another. Where was it? “What are you looking for, baby?” Jason’s gruff voice sounded behind her. “My dress,” she said quietly, looking up at him across the bed with a smile. A scrap of blanket covered one leg and his waist, leaving the rest of his muscled physique properly displayed. He ran one hand across his chest and then stretched back with his arms locked over his head. Pure masculine motion. The flex of his triceps was too much to resist, and Laine climbed back into the bed. Jason’s mouth curved up with his sexy grin, and she wondered how she’d managed not to jump him for so long. Taking one of her wrists, he pulled her across him so she straddled his waist. “I thought we had this all worked out. You were going to stay naked for me; I was going to pleasure you beyond your wildest dreams.” Laine laughed. “I assure you, I’ve been thoroughly pleasured.” Jason smiled, running his hands over her hips. Then he sat up,
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark shifting Laine back on his lap as he leaned over the side of the bed. “Here why don’t you put this on for now?” He handed her the white dress shirt he’d been wearing when they descended on his previously immaculate apartment. She slipped her arms into the huge sleeves and wrapped herself in the fine cotton that smelled of his cologne. “Perfect.” Jason’s hands skimmed up the front of the unbuttoned shirt, over the swells of her breasts, and brushed her nipples through the fabric. “Hungry?” “What?” Not at all where she’d expected him to go next. Jason grabbed the phone off the nightstand and hit the speed dial. “I have the best open‐late Chinese delivery place. Chow’s. You like spicy?” Her stomach rumbled at the mention of food and, considering the workout they’d had, it made sense that she’d need a few extra calories to make it through the night. Chinese sounded fantastic. She nodded. “Really spicy.” After a warm greeting with whoever answered the phone at Chow’s, he began ordering, and after the fifth item, she crawled off his lap, wondering how much carryout Jason ate. He owned a five star restaurant on the second floor, looked to have a fully functional kitchen in the penthouse, and yet he seemed to have committed the entire menu to memory. Her kind of man; he had skills. Pulling her hair out of the neck of his shirt, she twisted it over one shoulder and ventured out into the apartment, giggling at the evidence of their path into the bedroom. Finding her dress a few feet in from the elevator doors, she picked it up along with her keys, clutch, and Jason’s suit jacket. She set her things in a pile on the end table and then hung his jacket over a chair in the dining room, smoothing the wrinkles as she looked around. The first time she’d been here, she was so flustered by her cake‐ coated mad dash for the elevator she hadn’t noticed anything other than the difficulty of washing frosting out of her hair. But now, as she looked around, she saw the penthouse as if for the first time. It was immense.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Floor to ceiling windows against the far wall offered a sprawling view of the city’s sparkling night lights and the dark void of water beyond. The classic décor was a testament to his good taste, and Laine found herself walking through the space touching every chair and table, wondering if Jason had selected it himself. Strong arms circled her waist; warmth pressed against her back. It felt like heaven. “Food’s going to be here in fifteen minutes.” Jason brushed her hair back over her shoulder and planted a quick kiss against her neck before crossing over to the piano. Wearing a pair of black track pants and no shirt, he sat down on the bench and began playing Frank Sinatra’s Fly Me to the Moon. Was there anything this man wasn’t good at? Laine fell into the armchair beside the piano, tucking her legs up beneath her. He played beautifully, fingers dancing over the keys with practiced ease. “Is this how you get all the girls to fall for you?” Jason looked up, continuing to play. “Why, is it getting me somewhere?” Yes. “I don’t know. I still think you’re going to have to work a little harder for me. I’m not your average girl, playboy.” He smirked at her. “Playboy?” “As if you don’t know your reputation. You had a different woman on your arm every time I saw you.” She arched her brow for emphasis. “I saw you a lot. What changed?” “You.” She laughed and dropped her gaze to her lap. It sounded like such a line. But she wanted to believe it. Jason went on. “Basically, I had a bad lesson in love pretty early. Almost made it down the aisle, but I walked in on my fiancée with a man between her legs the night before the wedding. It turned out everyone knew about it but me. No one wanted to tell me. Anyway, when I told her it was over, she was furious. She wanted to be Mrs. Henley way more than she wanted me. Thought we should get married anyway, that we could both fuck whomever we pleased… I was in love with her, so that
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark was a big hurt. I didn’t want to face it again. So I dated…a lot,” he said, with a little grin, “never letting anyone get close enough to matter.” She’d known there was a history, but she’d never found out the details. Looking at the man in front of her, his fingers dancing flawlessly over the keys, she wondered how any woman could ever choose to be with another. It didn’t make sense. “I’m sorry, Jason.” “Don’t be. I have you. I have everything I want.” She was flustered. He said all the right things. So right that she didn’t know how to respond and suddenly nerves had her searching for the safety of their banter. “You’re so sure you have me?” “Okay, you want me to work for it?” He played on and when Laine thought there could be no better way to pass the time, he glanced over at her, a tentative look on his face. “If you tell anyone, I’ll throw you off the roof.” “What are you talk—” He opened his mouth and, in a low sexy voice that made every hard defense Laine had built around her heart melt into a pool between her legs, put Harry Connick, Jr. to shame. Laine watched, her heart thudding against her ribs like it wanted to break free and crawl into his lap. Realizing her mouth was hanging open, still frozen mid‐question, she snapped it shut. Suddenly she felt like she was the one who had the work to do. From the kitchen the phone sounded with two sharp trills. Jason jumped up from the piano, rubbing his hands together. “Food’s here.” He walked over to the elevator doors and rifled through his wallet for a few bills. Laine crossed to the piano to admire the silver framed photos displayed atop the dark wood’s mirror finish. Pictures of Jason with his parents in various locales around the world. He looked like his father. But his smile was all mom. She wondered what a child of Jason’s might look like, maybe a girl— Her face flooded with heat. The man had taken her back to his apartment for a fling. What the hell was she doing speculating over the mergence of Henley/Malone genes? What did she even know about Jason
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark outside of work? That he was extraordinary in bed? That he was a glutton when it came to spicy midnight snacks from Chows? That everything he did surprised her and made her smile. That he always seemed to know what to say to make her laugh. Or that he could talk to her about anything and make her feel like the only person in the world who mattered. Maybe she knew a few things. Maybe she knew more than she realized. She swallowed hard. This was so not keeping her emotions from spiraling out of control. The doors swished open behind her and the spicy, sweet aroma of steaming hot food tickled her nose and made her mouth water. Laine pulled the front of Jason’s shirt across her chest. It hung almost to her knees, but she still felt self‐conscious when the delivery guy glanced in. “Hey man, big order tonight. Is this your wedding planner?” Laine’s eyes widened in surprise. Jason grinned like a goof and, shoving the bills into the delivery guy’s hand, took the three handle bags into his own. “Beat it, Jimmy, before you get me in trouble.” Jimmy chuckled and backed into the elevator. “Night, Jay. See you tomorrow.” The doors closed, and Jason brought the food to the floor in front of the fireplace. Tearing into the bags he set up one box after another, opening each to display the bounty. “You want to pick out something to listen to?” Laine walked over to the stereo and looked at a couple of the discs lying on top. Jack Johnson, Jason Mraz, Ella Fitzgerald, and The Police to name a few. Nice. “Oh, I love this one,” she said, selecting Maroon 5, Songs about Jane. “I know, you were humming that one tune for weeks. I had to ask Karen at the front desk what it was. You don’t mind the floor, do you?” Laine stared down at him. How had she missed it? She walked over and knelt next to him. “Not at all. What have we got here?”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Plucking up the chopsticks he delved into one of the white boxes and held his pick out to her mouth. “The first cashew, for you.” “This must be love.” Jason smiled, leaning back on one arm as he fished out another spicy morsel for her. “The Kung Pao is going to knock your socks off.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark
Chapter Three Saturday, the nineteenth of June Laine all but danced into the hotel lobby. Having spent her first night out of Jason’s bed since she fell into it the week before, she was giddy with excitement to see him this morning. After last night’s rehearsal, she’d met with Connie to discuss potential problems that might surface with the happy couple, and by the time they’d wrapped up it was late. So she’d gone home, alone, and spent half the night awake, frustrated and thrashing in the sheets, kicking at the cold emptiness around her. But now relief was only a penthouse away. The wedding was going to be a breeze, and she was flying high. There was nothing to catch them up. Nothing to worry about. Laine had kept a watchful eye on the groom, and not once had he even looked at another woman. He barely looked at her, even when she asked him direct questions. She was hoping for another Saturday of smooth‐sailing wedding bliss and another night in Jason’s arms and bed. She’d worn the new, shimmering blue dress he’d sent her as a gift to replace the one saturated in the four‐tiers of twice‐abandoned cake from two weeks ago, and it was going to take all of her restraint not to beg him to tear it off her. Her plan was to steal a few hours this morning with him before both of their days kicked into high gear. Maybe offer him a little preview of the night to come by showing off the bra and panty set that matched
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark her dress exactly. Ask for his expert opinion on the ease of getting her out of them. Unable to help herself, she rushed up to the concierge desk and bounced on her toes. “Hi Jackie, looking lovely this morning. I’m here for Jason.” Jackie flashed a winning smile and nodded quickly. “Sure, Ms. Malone, he left instructions that you head straight up to the residence. Elevator One will take you direct, and I’ll call to let him know you’re on your way.” “Thank you.” She had to stop smiling like this. Anyone who saw her was bound to read each and every emotion flitting through her head. Her business smile, the bride smile, was warm and reassuring, but only surface deep. It showed what she wanted it to, and nothing more. These days though, she had complete strangers beaming back at her like her grin made their day. It was downright embarrassing. She was out of control… and it felt incredible. Inside the elevator, the doors swished shut and the display flashed to “Private car.” She had the perfect greeting in mind, but she had to move fast. * * * * * The elevator doors opened, and all conscious thought abandoned Jason’s head. Draped provocatively against the rail of the car, Laine wore nothing but a bra, panties and her matching sapphire blue, strapped heels. With one foot propped against the rail, the other planted firmly on the floor, she was one enticing invitation. Her eyes flashed mischief from beneath lowered lids as her fingers played at the waist of her tiny panties. “I’ve been thinking about you all night long.” A deep groan rumbled from somewhere near Jason’s stopped heart. He wanted nothing more than to step into the car, sink to his knees in front of her, and set his mouth to giving her something she’d never
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark forget. But he knew he couldn’t. “Laine, you take my breath away.” He stepped into the elevator, stripped off his blazer, and wrapped it around her shoulders. “But I’ve got to talk to you about something first.” The wanton look disappeared, and she transformed into the controlled creature he so often saw handling nuptial emergencies. “What?” she asked, braced for anything. God, he didn’t want to tell her. Pulling the lapels of his jacket closed across her chest with one hand, he rested the other against her arm. “It’s the groom.” “What? He’s nervous, he’s missing, he’s got cold feet… I can handle anything short of him being dead. Oh my God, he isn’t dead?” “No, nothing like that—” “Okay then,” she said with a faltering smile. “He’s getting married today, I’ll make it work. There isn’t another woman, I know—” “He’s gay.” Laine’s eyes closed for a long moment, and the breath leaked out of her in a slow hiss. “Are you sure?” “After you left, I had one of our guys keep an eye on him. I…I was trying to help. My guy followed him into the ballroom and found him making out with one of the groomsmen. Apparently they were rather passionate. He left discreetly, figuring there was no stopping something that had already started.” “So no one knows?” Jason stared at her. “Not yet. You’re the first. It’s up to you how we break it to the girl. I’ll do it, if you’d rather not have her associate the news with Blissful Brides—” “No.” She sighed heavily, her eyes focused on some distant point in space as she stepped into her dress. “I’ll be the one to tell her. But I’ve got to tell Connie first. I’m sure she’ll have some kind of damage control in mind.” “I’m sure.” It was physically painful to watch Laine dress without touching her the way he’d spent the whole of last night thinking about. Especially after the greeting he’d gotten in the elevator.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Pulling the straps of her dress up, Laine turned around, shot a quick glance over her shoulder. “A little help?” “Of course.” Jason placed his hands low on her spine and pulled the zipper up, closing off the smooth skin on her gorgeous back. He twisted her sleek fall of hair aside and clasped the dress closed. The smell of her hit him like an anvil over the head. She was fresh, clean with a hint of something citrus and herbal. Not sure he’d be able to control himself this close to her, he stepped back two paces and jammed his hands into the pockets of his suit pants. Laine sank into the deep cushions of his couch and stared at her phone. She looked so small, her knees pressed together, ankles apart. Finally she punched in the numbers to contact her boss and, resting her forehead against one hand, effectually shielded her face from his scrutiny. “I’ll give you a bit of privacy.” He moved off toward the kitchen and fiddled with the coffee maker. He poured the water in, and then dumped several scoops of grounds into the filter. Strong stuff, the way she liked it. Sugar, no cream. Stepping over to the breakfast bar for a couple of thick mugs, he stole a glimpse of Laine in the other room. Her face looked strained, her hand open wide as if frozen mid‐gesture. “Connie, I get that… no, she doesn’t know…” Laine’s eyes flashed up at Jason, then quickly away. Rising off the couch, she hunched forward and walked back toward the elevator. Jason’s hands gripped the counter. He should have given her more privacy, but... The look of guilt he’d seen on Laine’s face was twisting his stomach in knots. He should have known Connie wouldn’t want to tell the bride about the groom’s secret. She’d be more worried about another last minute failure than the actual happiness and success of two real people. A woman was about to walk down the aisle and vow to love and cherish this one man for the rest of her life—a man who spent the night before in the arms of another man. It wasn’t fair. Connie didn’t have much of a heart in that bony little chest of hers, but he knew Laine would do the right thing. He knew her; she would have to. He couldn’t be wrong again. Laine stood at the door to the elevator, her body language
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark suggesting defeat. She pulled the phone away from her ear, covering the receiver with her hand, and looked at Jason. “I’ve got to take care of this. I’ll talk to you later.” The look on her face made him want to pull her back into the apartment and make her tell him what she was going to do. Assure him that she’d never consider putting business before someone else’s life. But he didn’t need her to tell him, he knew it already. So he smiled his reassuring smile and nodded. “I’ve got a meeting in about forty‐five minutes, but I’ll be back in a few hours. Call me if you need anything.” She nodded and stepped into the elevator she’d barely stepped out of. As the doors closed, all he heard was Laine’s resigned voice. “Fine, fine. I understand Connie… I said I understand… no one—” * * * * * Laine paced the halls of the eighth floor. Connie’s last words ate at her gut. Some girls don’t want to know… The dark halls of memories lit, one after another, to the worst day of her life. Swallowing hard at the memory, she felt bile rising in her throat. Her brother‐in‐law, only hours before his wedding, pulling her into the stairwell and kissing her. Her sister, Gail, screaming that Laine had ruined her special day. Demanding to know why she couldn’t have just kept her mouth shut. Laine shook away the tear‐streaked phantom, damning the choice that she’d been faced with. It never occurred to her that her sister wouldn’t have wanted to know, that Gail would go through with the ceremony regardless. Like it never occurred to her that she would be written out of her sister’s life forever. Or that she would end up so driven to fix her mistake she would make a career out of it. Laine stared at the phone in her trembling hand. She had to do it. Dialing the number, she hit send and waited through four rings before the line picked up. “Gail? It’s me, Laine. Please don’t hang up. I really need to talk to you.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark A long silence followed. Laine stopped pacing, stopped breathing. She waited. “Laine, are you okay?” She closed her eyes and nodded, trying to push the sound out through a throat seized with emotion. How many years had it been since she heard her sister say her name? “Yes, sort of. I’m sorry, but I need to talk to you.” “Okay... What is it?” “After all these years, do you still believe you would have been happier if I hadn’t told you about Danny?” A cool hiss of breath came through the line, and Laine thought she was about to be hung up on. But then Gail answered, her voice slow, reflective. “Maybe. For a while. I was twenty. So young. Danny? It’s possible things would have been different between us if I hadn’t known. Or maybe if I’d found out for myself what he was like, instead of being so wrapped up in blaming someone else—you—and trying so hard to prove everyone wrong, I might have left him before getting pregnant. But then I wouldn’t have my daughters. And Danny is, for the most part, a decent man. I guess I could have done worse. I don’t know.” Laine bowed her head, her heart aching for them both. “How are the girls? The pictures at mom’s are beautiful.” Gail’s voice brightened, bringing Laine up with her. “The girls are wonderful. So smart and funny.” She laughed. “Trina is five, and she reminds me of you the most. Makes me laugh all the time.” Somehow it made a difference to know that even though her sister hadn’t spoken to her, she’d at least thought of her. That was something. “Laine, I still wish you’d never told me what Danny pulled before the wedding, but not because you were wrong to do it. Because I’ve missed you so much. I’m sorry. I was wrong and pig‐headed. And then I was so embarrassed. It wasn’t your fault, and I’ve know it for a long time. I just had too many problems to face up to fixing this one. Honey, I love you.” Laine choked back a sob, wiping a tear from her cheek. “I love you
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark too.” * * * * * Briefcase in hand, Jason walked up to Dolce’s darkened storefront. It was familiar, unpleasant, being there again. But it would be worth it in the end. He depressed the bell and rocked back on his heels, checking out the neighborhood. Not much had changed in the years since he’d been here last. The door to the bakery opened, and Jason waited for Sophia to invite him in. “Fine. Let’s get this over with,” she said in her lilting English. She stood back from the door, one eye squinting slightly at him as she pulled on her imported cigarette. Jason adjusted the briefcase in his grip and followed her over to a small table by the counter. He swung the case up onto the tabletop, popped it open and spun it around to face her. Sophia leaned forward, greed in her eyes. It was what he had banked on. Jason glared at her over the payoff. “Give me the ring, and the money is yours.” Sorting through the bills, she piled them up, fanning one bundle with her thumb. “You’re a fool, Jason. You always have been. You were a lovesick puppy ten years ago and looking at you now, I’m guessing you’re lovesick for someone new. This ring isn’t worth half of what you are paying me, but you want to see it on her finger. Are you so sure she won’t make a fool out of you too?” He didn’t doubt Laine. He knew her. Loved her. He wouldn’t let old hurts from someone else undermine the faith he had in her. “Just take your money.” “Gladly.” And that was it. After all these years, his grandmother’s engagement ring rattled across the table, and back into the Henley line. It would be perfect on Laine’s hand.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark * * * * * Jason sat in his Mercedes and stared in disbelief at the jubilant wedding party emerging from the hotel’s front lobby. The bride and groom looked ecstatic, grins plastered from ear to ear as they ran through a spray of birdseed to the cover of the waiting white Limo. It looked as though everything had been perfect… for someone. His heart sinking, he removed the small velvet box from his coat pocket and opened it up. The two karat solitaire caught the light streaming through the dash, reflecting a rainbow of lights around the interior of the car. How could she have kept the truth from the bride? He’d been so sure he knew her, knew her heart. But then he’d been sure about Sophia—a woman who never loved him, but wanted his name— and every man she could find between her legs. No one had wanted to tell him, but everyone had known. If he hadn’t found her himself that last night before the wedding... “Damn it,” he growled, snapping the lid closed and stuffing the box back into his pocket, before heading into the hotel. The doors swished open for him, and he caught sight of Laine tucked into an overstuffed sofa in the lounge. She turned to face him, a sad smile breaking across her face. Anger hardened inside of him. It was too late now for regrets. The wedding was over. She’d played her part, and he couldn’t console her. Jason turned away and headed to his elevator, where the car was waiting. Stepping inside, he plugged in his key and turned the car to private service. As the doors closed, he looked up and saw Laine, now standing by the exit looking back at him. In his mind’s eye he saw her staring up at him with cake smeared in her hair, looking more beautiful than he’d ever seen her. He saw her waiting half‐naked to lure him into the elevator earlier that morning. He saw her the way he had that first night two years ago, giving a toast about romance, love and marriage. About what weddings really meant. His heart plummeted in his chest. He was making a monumental
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark mistake. There had to be an explanation; all she had to do was give it to him. He slammed his hand against the door open button, but the car had already started up. Shit, he flicked at the stop switch twice, reversed the car and felt a mist of sweat break out across his brow as he waited the eternity for the doors to open. The round trip hadn’t taken more than thirty seconds, but Laine was already gone. He ran through the front doors just as a cab pulled around the far lane of the lot. “Laine!” Cutting through the rows of parked cars, he headed off the cab, slapping his palm down on the hood. The rear window was half‐open; Laine was huddled against the padded bench seat. “Can you just tell me what happened? Make me understand how you could care more about a job than someone’s life? Damn it, I saw you hesitate this morning, but I wanted to believe so much that you were different. How could you do it?” Her eyes, glistening with unspent tears, wouldn’t meet his. “Yes, Jason. I hesitated. There is no single answer that is right for every question. Sometimes things happen that make you question your instincts… I—Never mind. It doesn’t matter what happened. Just let me go, I don’t want to talk anymore.” Jason backed away from the cab, raking his fingers through his hair. She couldn’t face him. Maybe it was for the best. The small box in his pants pocket pressed against his thigh. How could he have been so wrong again? Walking back to the hotel, one thought rose above the rest. He’d been a fool, again. He shook his head, trying to clear the muddled emotions. No, trying to stop them all together. He didn’t want to feel anything. By the time the lobby doors swished shut, an icy calm had embraced him. He wasn’t staying down this time. Scanning the lobby, he caught sight of Dill leaning casually against the check‐in desk, giving the new girl a reason to smile. Just the man he wanted. Flagging him over, Jason laid out what he was looking for. Dil pursed his lips. “So when you say as different from Ms. Malone
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark as I can find, you mean you want an ugly, dim‐wit who’s going to agree with everything you say?” “I don’t need it from you, too.” He couldn’t get a break. Even Dil was giving him a hard time. “Just find me some company. Someone… distracting.” He looked back at Dil and narrowed his eyes. “Not a hooker.” He wasn’t going to be some chump drowning his sorrows over a pint down at the bar. And he wasn’t going to take a year to get back in the saddle again; it wouldn’t be another repeat of his Sophia breakup. Not that Laine was anything like Sophia, but—he didn’t know what the hell he was thinking. She was enough like Sophia to leave him feeling like a complete schmuck being led around by his dick. No more. Jamming his hands into his pockets, Dill shifted his gaze around the office. “Okay, sir. I think I have a girl for you.” “Not for me, for tonight.” No one was going to be right for him. * * * * * Pasty Cline’s Crazy poured out of the juke box in a slow painful assault on Laine’s heart. Wanting to grab her glass of Chablis and rocket it at the person responsible for the song selection, she instead smoothed her hand over the polished oak bar and reined in her emotions. It wasn’t the time to get all weepy over Jason and his holier than thou attitude. Asshole. No, now, this very minute, was the start of her future. One door closed and another door opened. It always proved true, but the timing in this instance was rather shocking, even to a professional in an industry known for serendipity. Laine adjusted herself on the bar stool and, crossing her legs, angled herself toward the man seated beside her, Max Johnson. He was watching her intently, waiting for her response. One last time she let her gaze run the length of his body, taking in the details. This guy was a catch, if ever she saw one. Clean cut good looks, nice dresser, a smooth smile, and trusting eyes that stayed focused
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark on her, proving she was the center of his attention—an essential skill. The body was a plus, no doubt about it, talk about a strong back. He was old enough to have some experience, young enough where he was still eager to learn. He’d been pursuing her for months and looking at him now, she knew he was exactly what she needed. Taking a deep breath, the deliberation was over. She smiled and offered him her hand. “Okay.” * * * * * “Oops,” Pammy tittered, pulling the scrap of her dress back over her nipple. Peering up from beneath a thick mane of bleached blonde hair, she bit into her bottom lip and shrugged. Jason smiled and raised his glass, draining the last drop of Belvedere before returning it to the table with a thunk. Glancing around the restaurant, he saw an unusual number of his staff lingering at the perimeter of the room, each looking away with obvious embarrassment as his gaze landed on them. The hotel restaurant had been a poor choice for dinner. Well, at least with this many prying eyes, he wouldn’t have to wait on the refill. Holding the glass up, he clinked the ice around and raised an eyebrow for a taker. A new glass was on the table within ninety seconds. “Five star service,” he said, daring a glance at Pammy. The suggestive manner in which she ran her fingers up and down the stem of her wine glass set him on edge, and he found himself pulling at his collar. She was eyeing him like a piece of meat. “How’s the risotto tonight?” He sounded like her waiter, not the man about to slam his cock into her. What the fuck was the matter with him? This was just the kind of girl he’d asked for, and here he was mentally cursing Dil for hooking them up. Eighteen months ago she would have been perfect. They would have been playing footsy under the table, whispering conversation thick with innuendo. Hell, eighteen months ago, he probably would have been fingering her panties in his suit pocket by now.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark As if on cue, the pointed toe of a stiletto jabbed into his shin, making him jump back. “Sorry.” Her nose wrinkled up, and she started to lick the tines of her fork. “I’ll have to kiss that owie for you later.” Her mouth going anywhere near what promised to be a swollen purple bruise on his shin was decidedly unappealing. The date wasn’t working. He didn’t feel better. He wasn’t distracted from the feeling of his heart being broken. All he could think about was Laine, and all he wanted was to stop. Drastic measures were in order. Downing half the contents of his freshly‐filled glass, Jason leaned forward and took Pammy’s hand, stroking his thumb across the palm. “What do you say we get out of here?” Her tongue slid in a slow caress over her teeth. “I thought you’d never ask.” Jason flagged a waiter, and finished the rest of his drink. His stomach was starting to revolt, but the edge was off, and that’s what he needed. “Call down to the front desk, and get me a room. Any room. Have the key brought to the elevators.” “Sure thing, Mr. Henley.” And he was gone. Just like the old days. Before Laine. Jason helped his date up and escorted her, palm resting at the base of her spine, out of the restaurant to the bank of elevators. His skin felt clammy, and his mind kept wandering off, looking for Laine at every table, behind every door. What was she doing right now? A cool hand circled his, drawing his thoughts back into the hotel, to the pretty blonde… who had just started sucking his finger. His dick felt like it was trying to crawl up his leg to get away. Shit. The elevator doors swished open, and the night manager stepped out. “Jason, we’re booked up tonight. There was some problem with the Fitz downtown, and we got a flood of their customers about an hour ago.” No rooms. No beds, except for the empty one in his apartment that still carried the scent of Laine’s conditioner on one of the pillows. Hanging
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark his head, he wondered why he’d let the date go on as long as he had. He should have known what a mistake it was when he’d picked Pammy up and his first thought hadn’t been some acknowledgement of her hotness, but to wonder whether she flossed. “Can you get Dil for me? We’ll be down in the lobby.” Turning to Pammy, he said the only lame thing that came to mind. “It’s not you. It’s me.” * * * * * Behind the wheel of the Henley limo, Dill wore a look of utter disappointment. “You used to be my idol, man. Now, I don’t even know what to say. Pammy was a sure thing. What a waste, makes me sick to think about it.” Jason, slumped in the front passenger seat, nodded, then shook his head and finally just shrugged. The vodka was catching up with him. “I’ll send ‘er a dozen roses tomorrow. Enough. Let’s focus. It’s go time.” Dill turned a slow skeptical eye toward him and then through the passenger window to the apartment building beyond them. “You sure you don’t want to call her instead? I’ve got the phone right here. Or better, wait until tomorrow.” “No, I screwed up. A romantic gesture is in order. I’m going to do it.” He grabbed the coins off the dash and shouldered into the limo door. On the second try he made it out and started toward the darkened side of the brick building. Most of the lights were out. Dill came up beside him, hands stuffed in his pockets, shoulders shrugged forward. “Tell me again why we can’t use dimes or pennies?” Jason let out a snort. “She’s special.” Then, after testing the loft in his hand, he threw the first silver dollar at the window. Obscenities ran out of Dill in a steady stream as the first coin rustled through the leafy branches behind them and finally dropped onto the ground. “That wasn’t even toward the building, man.” “Don’t start with me. Practice throw.” “Don’t lie to yourself. It was a pussy throw.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark “Fuck, Dill. Language! People live here. This is a romantic gesture.” “Yeah, yeah, boss. Sorry.” “And now with the boss business.” Emotion clogged Jason’s throat as he turned to Dill. “I thought we were friends.” “Throw.” Jason tottered, picked up the coin and then focused on the building. “Which window are you aiming at?” Jason ignored him. Dill wasn’t a romantic; he didn’t understand about a fate. “Which window?” “The one this hits!” Using all the strength and coordination he could muster, Jason launched the coin. “You don’t even know? Is this even her building?” Jason stared up at the night sky. Laine was going to love this. She’d come to the window, her hair all falling down around her shoulders, maybe a tissue in her hand. She’d see him and wipe away her last tear. “Watch it!” Jerked back into the now, Jason blinked, his face still tilted skyward, there was no one at the window. But what the hell was that coming straight— “Fuck!” Jason was on the ground, blinking at the warm, sticky goo oozing into his eye where the heavy coin had hit him. Dill’s face popped into this line of vision. “For crissakes, you’re a bleeder too? That’s it, night over. We’re going back to the hotel.” Wiping at his eye, the back of his hand came away wet and sticky. He was an ass. “Is she going to take me back?” “I don’t know, man.” Dil’s voice softened as he hefted Jason off the ground. “But definitely not tonight.” * * * * * What she’d done wasn’t a betrayal. Lying in bed, eyes fixed on the ceiling, Laine tried to believe it. The
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark way they’d left things, there was nothing to feel guilty about. After all, the sooner the better when it came to moving on. And that’s what she’d done. It was going to be better this way. Of course it would. She wasn’t going to worry. It wasn’t a betrayal. It wasn’t.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark
Chapter Four Saturday, the twenty‐fifth of June The week since Laine had slipped out of his life had been torture. Jason had felt like an ass after Saturday night and had tried to convince himself that maybe he was better off, that he’d somehow dodged a bullet, but every minute that passed without her increased his sense of dread. By Sunday night he knew without a doubt he’d been so wrong. Damn it, it was her job, and he trusted her. No matter what she chose to do with the information, she must have believed it was the right thing. He phoned her, but his calls went straight to voicemail, and he hung up without leaving a message. He’d thought he would see her around the hotel. Only she’d missed her appointments, and, suspecting she was avoiding him, he decided to wait until Saturday. She’d never miss a job. And there was a wedding booked for the rooftop rose garden at ten this morning, reception following in the ballroom at noon. Blissful Brides Inc. listed as the contact for arrangements. Jason had been staking out the lobby since six‐thirty, and as a precaution he’d left instructions at the desk that when Laine came in, she was to be sent directly to his apartment. Now, at eight‐thirty‐six, the wedding planner finally strolled in, arms laden with a confusion of papers, looking almost put together. Connie, not
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Laine. Jason’s brow furrowed. He didn’t want to get stuck with the old crow playing intermediary between them, but nothing else had worked. He needed to know if Laine had passed off just this job or all of her weddings booked at the Henley. Connie Bliss was only in her late fifties but smoking and sun had added more years than any plastic surgeon could remove and, with her over‐processed helmet of hair, she looked like the nasty grandmother no one wanted to snuggle. Watching her brittle steps through the lobby, Jason thought it smart business that she kept to the management end of Blissful Brides and let her more approachable associates handle the people part. He took a few strides up to her. “Connie, I thought we had a deal about Laine. She handles all my accounts; I refer all inquiries to Blissful Brides. Where is she?” “There you are, Jason. Nice to see you again,” she said, bustling by, before she stopped and squinted at him. “Good lord, what happened to your nose?” Damn it. “Bar fight.” She nodded slowly, pursing her lips. “It’s a shame about Laine, but some people just don’t have what it takes for this business. Have you got some kind of space I can set up in? Our bride’s special day is going to have to roll smoothly on its own—it’ll take a few weeks for me to familiarize myself with each gals’ requirements. You know how much of a hassle these needy girls can be.” “Hold on, Connie, let me help you with this stuff.” Knowing it would warm her up, he grabbed a loose stack of papers that appeared to have spilled out once or twice already. Wet coffee saturated the corners of several sheets and crumbs sprinkled out of the stacks as he straightened them. “What are you talking about with Laine? Where is she?” Connie arched an eyebrow, sizing him up. He met her demanding stare and raised it. Connie gave first. “She wasn’t up for the job, dear. She flat out refused to follow my direct order about some rather unpleasant business
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark with the wedding last weekend, trouble with a groom, you know. You’d think she’d have some respect for the years I’ve put into this business, but she wouldn’t listen to reason. Ran off and spilled to the bride against my express orders not to. What did it get her? Nothing but a sad girl in a white dress going through with the wedding anyway. Knowing her man was swapping spit with a groomsman instead of her. Hmph. I’ve seen everything. If I’d been the one meeting with those two, I would have known in an instant that he swung the other way, and… I would have known that bride knew about it too.” Jason’s mouth hung open as he listened to Connie go on about the events of last weekend like they were nothing. Laine had confronted the bride after all; no wonder she looked so sad when he came back. And he’d just blown past her. She’d risked her job— “Did you fire her?” “No, so back off, Big Boy. I didn’t have to. Not that I really would have anyway—you and I had a deal, after all. The girl knew weddings and brought in business. Got it done all right.” Connie sighed and looked up at him like maybe he could shed some light on the situation. “She quit on me. Told me she didn’t respect the fact that I wouldn’t be honest with my brides. Fed me a bunch of malarkey about lives and futures and happiness on the line. Saving families from being the ones to break the bad news later or some such bunk. I asked her if she knew what she was doing; she said yes. She offered to give me a month, but I let her out. Like I told you, she was soft; this business eats the soft ones for lunch.” Jason was trying to get his head around the fact that Laine wasn’t going to be there. That he wouldn’t be seeing her around every corner, brightening most of the days of the week with some bridal appointment or another. That there was nothing tying her to him or this place any more. “Has she got another job already?” “Nah, not that I know of. She’s got contacts everywhere, though. Someone’ll snap her up in a hurry. Damn, but I hated to see her go.” Jason showed Connie into a small office and left her to get organized. He needed to get away, get some space, get his jaw off the floor, his gut untwisted. He’d blown it even worse than he thought. Now there was only one thing he could do.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark * * * * * “Max, I’ve got to run out for a couple of errands. I’ll pick up some coffee on my way back.” Laine stuffed her foot into her New Balance sneaker and pulled her hair into a loose ponytail at her neck. “You need anything?” Shirtless, he popped his head out of the bathroom and smiled. “No, I think I brought everything over from my apartment that I need. I’m going to try and fix this pipe under your sink while you’re gone though.” “Wow, you really are full service.” “That’s me,” he added with a quick wink. He was cute. Laine grabbed her bag, bit into the thick leather braid of her key chain to free up her hands and reached for the stack of binders by the door. Straining to collect them, she pulled a deep breath in through her nose and stopped. The leather smelled like wedding cake. She closed her eyes, tamping down the images and emotions that came unbidden and walked out. She didn’t have time for her buttercream fantasies. She’d let Jason Henley get too far under her skin, too far into her heart. And he’d torn it to shreds. She’d made herself vulnerable to him, fallen under his spell and trusted what was between them. And Jason hadn’t. Her fingers clutched around the stack of binders as tears filled her eyes. Damn it, she needed to get control of herself. She couldn’t spend an hour crying everyday for the rest of her life. She had to focus on what was new, what was good. What she and Max were starting was going to be great. If she got her errands taken care of and got back so they could get at it again. And then she’d be able to get her mind off Jason Henley and how much not being with him hurt. * * * * * Jason pulled into an open space and killed the engine. Stepping out of the car, he looked up at the old brownstone apartment building—not
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark the building he’d been at the previous Saturday night—what an ass he was. It had a classic style, perfect for Laine. The “security” door was missing the latch, which meant at least he’d make it inside. Laine had every reason to be furious with him, but he would be damned if he’d give her any opportunity to turn him away before he’d had his chance to make things right. The building didn’t have an elevator, so Jason took the stairs up to the third floor and went to the only door in the hall. Soft music filtered through, along with the sounds of movement within. She was home. Smiling a bit, he dropped his head in relief and knocked twice. “Laine, it’s Jason. We need to talk.” No response. “Look, I was wrong and I know you’re angry, but, damn it, I love you and I’m not leaving until—” The lock tumbled and the door opened a few inches, revealing a man in his mid‐twenties with wet hair and a confused expression on his face. Pulling on a tight t‐shirt, he blocked the entrance to her apartment. Jason did a double take, his gut clenching with his fists—this was the guy he’d seen putting the moves on Laine at the hotel. Keeping his voice level, he pushed out the words. “Is Laine here?” Obviously having heard Jason’s professions and seeming to sense danger, Wet‐hair inched the door closed a bit further. “No, I’m sorry she had to run out. Can I give her a message when she comes back?” He wanted to grab a fistful of the guy’s shirt and drag him out into the hall, out of Laine’s apartment and out of her life. Somehow, Jason suspected the message might lose a bit of its meaning if it was delivered by this punk, who looked like he’d just rolled out of her bed and probably couldn’t wait to roll her back into it. Gritting his teeth, Jason forced the image of another man’s hands touching her body out of his mind. Finally, he looked up and nodded. “Just tell her Jason stopped by. And give her this.” With a last look down at the pink cardboard box tied with string, Jason reluctantly handed it over. * * * * *
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Slumped against the door of the fridge, phone resting against his chest, Jason stared out into his apartment and waited. He’d lived here for ten years. No, he’d showered and slept here for ten years. He could have stayed in any room in the hotel for all the living he’d actually done. Until three weeks ago, when he’d brought a woman wrapped in a tablecloth and covered in sticky sweetness through his door. Before Laine, the last woman had been Sophia Dolce. He’d been a fool then, just as she said he was, trusting her when she didn’t love anything but the idea of marrying into the Henley Hotel business. He’d spent ten years guarding his heart, defending his emotions, until Laine had broken through all his defenses without even trying. And he’d been a fool again. This time by not trusting her when he should have. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d gone a week without seeing her. In Laine’s business there were always details to attend to, tastings, rehearsals, seating plans, floral adjustments. She spent nearly as much time at the hotel as he did. Or, at least, until this week she had. Now, looking back at all of the business dinners—quick bites while they sat arm’s distance apart, him helping with arrangements rather than begging her to tell him what she loved, rather than touching her hair or her cheek—he was struck by what a waste of time it had all been. He should have told her he wanted her the first day. Should have pulled her into his arms and made love to her two years ago. Instead, he’d waited, trying to shake his growing need. And now he had less than three weeks of memories that revolved around more than place cards and someone else’s romance. Three weeks topped off by the indelible memory of a man opening her door like he lived there, offering to take a message. He had to get her back or he would have a lifetime to regret those few seconds that decided it all. The phone against his chest rang out. He stared down at it like an idiot before fumbling it to connect the line. “It’s me. You came by.” Her voice was soft, slow. Unsure. “Laine.” His head dropped forward. Thank God. “I’m so sorry. Please tell me there’s a chance. That it’s not too late.”
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark “I’m sorry too,” she whispered. “I should have talked to you. I should have told you what happened, the bride—” “I know about the bride. Connie told me. But it shouldn’t have mattered and I realized that before Connie explained, for what it’s worth. I’ve been dying without you. The way I treated you, walking past, like you’d done something so wrong you didn’t deserve a single word. It was horrible.” “You had to be thinking about your fiancée.” “You aren’t Sophia. That’s no excuse… Laine, I miss you.” “You should have come by sooner.” Her voice was cool, unreadable. If she meant because of that punk in her apartment… no, he’d win her back. He had to. “I should have, I’m such an assho—” “You’re an asshole.” Her smooth voice echoed out of the open elevator, ripping him from his self‐pity off the floor and onto his feet inside a second. Laine stood against the back corner of the mirrored car, stripped down to her sapphire bra, panties and heels, one foot planted against the side rail, the other on the floor. The fingers of her right hand traced lazy circles around her belly, while those of the left snapped her phone shut. The air felt thin coming in and out of his chest. “Laine…” “I said ‘You’re an asshole.’ You scared the hell out of my new assistant this morning.” “Assistant?” Oxygen seemed to reenter his system, rush his brain. She arched an eyebrow at him. “His name is Max. He’s been trying to get me to take him on as my apprentice for a while now, and last week we struck a deal. I’ve always liked the idea of working for myself, but, out of loyalty to Connie, I couldn’t consider it. I didn’t want to betray her after everything she’d done for me—giving me a chance when I was starting out—by going into competition with her. But now I know it’s the right thing. I’ve started my own company, Buttercream Brides. I don’t have an office yet, so we’re working out of my place. But that’s not why I’m here. Max gave me your message… something about you loving me?” Her eyes shone with hope and then flashed to mischief as she continued to stroke
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark the skin across her abdomen. “You owe me a rain‐check. And if you think you can get off without delivering on a debt, clearly you don’t realize who you are dealing with.” Jason was in the elevator within two strides. Dropping the phone, his fingers wound in her hair, tilting her head back, he met her mouth in a ravenous kiss. And then, tearing himself away, he looked into her eyes. “Laine, it’s been hell these last seven days. I love you. I don’t want to live without you.” She wove her fingers into his hair and pulled him close to her face. “Then don’t.” Jason was solid, warm. Real. Not the dream that had left Laine frustrated and confused every night for the past week. Gripping fistfuls of his shirt, she clung to him, desperate to feel him, to know that he wanted her as much as she wanted him. She’d been going through the motions of moving on with her life, but none of it felt real. None of it felt right. Deciding to start her own bridal consultant business should have been a thrill; it had been her dream for so long. But not having Jason to tell about it, to celebrate with her, left a drab sheen over the entire event. She missed him at every critical moment, expected to see him every time she turned around. For two years he’d been there whenever she’d needed him—as if he sensed her every emotion and need. He was there to bolster her when she felt doubt, to argue with her when she needed to get back on track. To hold her when she couldn’t stand to be alone anymore. It had been crazy not to run back to him and explain, beg him to understand. She’d been hurt, and her ego had gone into a full on temper tantrum when he’d walked through the lobby with that disappointed look plastered across his face. She’d been furious and brokenhearted. But then she’d thought about it. They believed in the same thing passionately enough that both were willing to take a stand in the name of love and honesty. Both willing to sacrifice something they loved to do the right thing. She couldn’t work for Connie anymore because Connie didn’t care about the outcome of a marriage past the last dance of the wedding day. Laine cared about the outcome of the couple’s life together.
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark Jason believed in love and honesty so much that he was ready to walk away from her when he thought she didn’t respect it. And he loved her enough to come after her, even before he understood, because he had faith in her. He was the man who made her believe in fairytale romance, the magic of weddings, and the lives she touched when she made them happen. “Jason, I love you. I need you too.” He pulled her tightly into his arms and tilted her head up to look at him. She could feel his heart beating against her chest. Then just as quickly he pushed her back and grabbed her hands, searching them for something. “Did your assistant give you the cake?” She blinked, looking up at him. He seemed tense. “Yes.” She leaned down and brushed her discarded clothes off the box. Lifting it by the tie, she held it up for him. “I brought it, you bad boy.” The corner of his mouth ticked up. “So you haven’t opened it yet?” “No. I wasn’t going to start without you.” “Good, open the box. But you’re wearing too many clothes.” He traced a line with his pinky from her bra down to her panties. “The shoes you can keep, but I’ll have to help you out of the rest.” Laine untied the string, chills racing across her skin. “Naked right? Something about a cottage, a bunch of promises of pleasure I recall. Maybe you could give me a taste of that right now.” She felt like she would melt from the heat in his eyes. “A taste would never be enough. If you let me, I’m going to give you everything, and I’m going to do it forever.” He took the box and knelt down in front of her, holding it up as she lifted the pink cardboard lid off the cake box and gasped. Embedded in the center of the ten‐inch round, buttercream frosted cake was the most breathtaking ring she’d ever seen. “Will you give me forever, Laine?” She dropped to her knees, pulling the frosting coated ring free. Jason set the cake aside and took the ring from her shaking grasp. He slid
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark it over the third finger on her left hand, leaving a smeared sweet trail of frosting in its path. “Yes, forever,” she sighed, feeling the word fill her heart as the soft glide of his lips against hers made the world go away. The End
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Icing on the Cake by Moira McTark
Author Bio Moira McTark lives with her husband and four young children in a small town in Minnesota. She can most often be found enjoying a spot of imaginary tea, crashing Hot Wheels, and building elaborate railways over the Island of Sodor. When Moira needs a sanity break, she slinks off to her office and writes. Visit her website at www.moiramctark.com or at www.moiramctark.blogspot.com. She loves to hear from her readers.
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